Listen: Father and son create new sounds

Cornwall family brings a new kind of sound that’s definitely worth a listen.

Letter/poem to the editor: Thinking of You and What the World Needs to Do

Stand on a bridge with a sign. If you can’t do that, honk.

Poetry: Note to the President

Let me note this morning I came/ across a coin, I thought, crossing/ Tully Road. Once a path for local/ soldiers. Farmers mostly. And nut/ gatherers. Its face looked more like/ a quarter. Washington’s. Until I looked/ more closely. Actually kneeled down.

Poetry: In changing times, Fenway Park’s mystique remains

Never thought you’d sing/ her name./ A girl you never knew. Swaying/ with a stadium of strangers…

Poetry: Cory’s Song

Not that you or I couldn’t have stood/ on our feet. For twenty-four hours./ Speaking impassionately./ Sat in a chair. Lain in a bed./ Reading words cast on a ceiling./ Rising, as we could, to the occasion…

Letter to the editor: Getting up early: lacrosse athletes & farmworkers

It’s not my place to suggest/ to your coach, she bus you/ to one of our Addison County/ farms. If you have to be in/ the Field House this early,/ you might as well see/ what’s going on around you.

Poetry: January 20th

Oh my director of the national/ portrait gallery/ of owls./ Oh what I wouldn’t give for you/ to leave your doors/ open. For me not to have to/ remember any glass/ painting the streets.

Poetry: Did you know Frost, I asked you

Wasn’t he the guy who wrote poetry/ up in Ripton, you said,/ when I asked you, if you knew/ Frost. If you ever bumped into him./ On one of his trips down the mountain.

Poetry: For Joe Castiglione, retiring

It’s not the same as calling it/a night./Saying goodbye. Even/here, in Fenway, there isn’t a wall/between us.

Poetry: Remembering our dentist, Harvey Green

Known for humming when he drilled./Singing, his kind of Novocaine.

Letter to the editor: A poetic take on recent racist incident at Bread Loaf

My Fellow Bread Loafers   Unlikely you’ve read or heard yet. There are sheets, inscribed. Hanging from the Inn’s deck. Nailed to an Annex post. One, across the field, waving   from Tamarack. Painted red and black. We Belong Here Too. I’m guessin … (read more)

Letter to the editor: Police are true public servants

Standing at Greg’s noontime, deli counter, next to one of our Middlebury police officers, I said, Hi, He extended his hand, his name, We greeted each other.

Poetry: My bugle, my flag

The state suggests I bring in my bird/ feeders./ If I don’t want to find myself/ staring into two dark eyes./ If I have enough courage./ To step onto my porch./With my bugle. My flag.

A Cornwall poem

“I can’t say I don’t look forward to this once-/a-year. When I’ll bump into you, elbow one/of my neighbors. By the history table.”

Poetry: At the vigil

No one could say who they were./ The men at the perimeter./ Why they appeared in uniforms./ Seemed to be wearing badges/ stitched into their shirts./ At this distance five-pointed stars.

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