POEMS


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Charles Cummings: “A life of prayer is
a life of beginning all over again.”

As is a life of writing. Perhaps a life of
writing is a life of prayer.

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From The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition. 2000

or·a·to·ry

1. A place for prayer, such as a small private chapel.

ETYMOLOGY:    Middle English oratorie, from Old French, from Late Latin rtrium, place of prayer, from Latin, neuter of rtrius, for praying, from rre, to pray.

2. Eloquence or skill in making speeches to the public.

ETYMOLOGY:    Latin (ars) rtria, (art) of speaking, feminine sing. of rtrius, oratorical, from rtor, speaker, from rtus, past participle of rre, to speak.

This is a place to archive my poems, written over the past fifteen years; the poems are listed alphabetically on the sidebar.  These include my best poems, but also some of my less-than-best.  Many are still changing.  New additions will be in the *NEW* category for at least a month or two. 

 

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  • Disclaimer

    Please do not assume that I am the speaker/ subject of my poems.

    In these times of creative nonfiction and fictionalized memoirs, I think of the poem itself as true fiction: it is most likely not factual, but it must be true.

    It is likely to be -- it is best if it is -- a truth I did not know before I wrote, and may not understand even then.

    A poem is my way of discovering (dis-covering) what I feel; sometimes, what I think -- but it is not necessarily biographical.


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The Page

IBPC: Poetry and Poets in Rags


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