Poem: Broadway tunes and religious devotion can mix

“Better to donate what we can./Give away our hearts,/Be lifted. Tenor to soprano./The phantoms in our barns,/Love struck in Panton’s stones.”

Poem: “After Class”

A poem in memory of Lia Smith.

Novembering democracy

A poem from Gary Margolis.

Listen: Father and son create new sounds

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

Letter to the Editor: Reflecting on Israel and Palestine

“Who wouldn’t want/to be led back to their century/their tent their house of stones?”

Jailed individuals speak through art & poems in Sheldon Museum exhibit

“Finding Hope Within” is a new exhibit at the Henry Sheldon Museum of Vermont History that features a collection of writings and artwork produced by incarcerated men and women in Vermont.

Letter to the editor: Bard is needed to tell story of ‘no clothes’

Where is the woodcutter’s youngest son,/ the poor widow’s clever daughter? Surely/ somewhere there’s an enchanted sword, a prince/ in bear’s clothing, a talking cat, a key/ to a secret door. Isn’t there a lamp?

This month in poetry: In just a few words

In high-summer evening-light four barefoot Amish/ kids bend, pulling weeds from their garden./ My mother looks at them from the car window, smiles/ at the young woman on the porch who holds a baby close.

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: Power? — Control?

So you want power?/ You want control?/ And when you have it?/ And when people all over/ are living in fear and hate?/ What then will they think of you?

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…

Poetry: Good night, Ilsley

Good night, Ilsley, our old friend./ With thanks and admiration\ we’ll watch with eager eyes and hearts/ your budding transformation.

This month in poetry: One of a living crowd

There’s something happening, don’t you think?/ Do you feel it under the brown crusted snow,/ under the wanting to break sky.

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.

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