Archives
- May 2021 (5)
- April 2021 (8)
- March 2021 (7)
- February 2021 (8)
- January 2021 (5)
- December 2020 (13)
- November 2020 (10)
- October 2020 (9)
- September 2020 (6)
- August 2020 (7)
- July 2020 (9)
- June 2020 (12)
- May 2020 (12)
- April 2020 (12)
- March 2020 (13)
- February 2020 (10)
- January 2020 (8)
- December 2019 (14)
- November 2019 (8)
- October 2019 (10)
- September 2019 (8)
- August 2019 (11)
- May 2019 (7)
- April 2019 (11)
- March 2019 (12)
- February 2019 (9)
- January 2019 (12)
- December 2018 (12)
- November 2018 (10)
- October 2018 (6)
- September 2018 (9)
- August 2018 (11)
- July 2018 (1)
- June 2018 (3)
- May 2018 (7)
- April 2018 (11)
- March 2018 (10)
- February 2018 (10)
- January 2018 (12)
- December 2017 (14)
- November 2017 (8)
- October 2017 (9)
- September 2017 (11)
- August 2017 (13)
- June 2017 (1)
- May 2017 (9)
- April 2017 (9)
- March 2017 (14)
- February 2017 (11)
- January 2017 (10)
- December 2016 (14)
- November 2016 (13)
- October 2016 (10)
- September 2016 (14)
- August 2016 (12)
- June 2016 (1)
- May 2016 (12)
- April 2016 (11)
- March 2016 (11)
- February 2016 (10)
- January 2016 (9)
- December 2015 (13)
- November 2015 (7)
- October 2015 (11)
- September 2015 (13)
- August 2015 (10)
- July 2015 (1)
- June 2015 (2)
- May 2015 (10)
- April 2015 (14)
- March 2015 (12)
- February 2015 (12)
- January 2015 (10)
- December 2014 (13)
- November 2014 (14)
- October 2014 (10)
- September 2014 (13)
- August 2014 (17)
- May 2014 (14)
- April 2014 (20)
- March 2014 (15)
- February 2014 (18)
- January 2014 (15)
- December 2013 (12)
- November 2013 (13)
- October 2013 (18)
- September 2013 (4)
Monthly Archives: February 2021
Feb 24 – Garrison Keilor “The Writer’s Almanac” – Raymond Carver – “AT LEAST”
I wrote most of this post in Washington DC while attending the American Catholic Colleges and Universities annual meeting. I grieved Stock’s absence just days after he died. One of the Province Jesuits came to pack his final effects and … Continue reading
Posted in Poetry
Leave a comment
February 22 — “Sometimes a woman simply has to run wild” -Judith Viorst
Monday, February 22 I read Judith Viorst’s poem late last night and, rare for me, wrote 3 poetic lines that the poet’s cadence teased out of some wellspring in my memory. “Sometimes a poet has to cut the reader loose … Continue reading
Posted in Poetry
Leave a comment
Ash Wednesday – Feb 17 “there lives the dearest freshness, deep down things” –Hopkins
“Lent” – – originally the word simply meant “Spring” (as in the German language “Lenz” and Dutch “lente”). It derives from the Germanic root for “long” because in the spring the days visibly lengthen. The English spoken in the United States originated in England as a blend of … Continue reading
Posted in Poetry
Leave a comment
Feb 15 – Jamaal May – “shift”
Monday, February 15, “I used to want to be this bad at a job.” I hadn’t posted a poem from Detroit poet Jamaal May in a while. He writes “Shift” with the subtle density of language that characterizes his poetry. … Continue reading
Posted in Poetry
Leave a comment
Las Manos – Karina Varela
Tom Florek, s.j. has long served as a rich source of powerful poetry, primarily from Central American and Mexican poets; he sent this to me over the weekend. Exquisite, as I read it. I am inclined to run Tom’s cover paragraph … Continue reading
Posted in Poetry
Leave a comment
Feb 5 – “haunting images of America’s past”
We usually save this space for what we call “contextual paragraphs” — short essays which we try to connect with something from the day that “wants our attention” – – e.g., the weather, some striking crisis, the season of the year, … Continue reading
Posted in Poetry
Leave a comment
Tamar Lanier February 3 – “A Failed Essay on Privilege”
“The Murder of Emmett Till” (PBS Feb 2, 2021) Last night I stayed up late to watch the PBS documentary account of the torture and murder of the now-infamous young black boy, Emmett Till and his white killers in … Continue reading
Posted in Poetry
Leave a comment
Jane Kenyon “Happiness”
Monday, February 1 – Jane Kenyon I first learned of Jane Kenyon’s “Happiness” from my favorite “American Experience” historical film producer, David Grubin, some years ago. On this snow-covered Monday in February with its off-tune noises of intemperate, clashing political … Continue reading
Posted in Poetry
Leave a comment