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Poetry
Donna Pucciani
for the night, we decidewe must go nowwhile we can. New York is sinking,we go to Pompei,itself a reminderthat nothing is permanent. Vesuvius erupted yesterday,volcanic ash blanchingthe air above Naples. At the airport, we rent a car,and suddenly we can smellthe sea, feel distended lig
Poetry
G. E. Schwartz
Seeing this we fall to our knees. WeWouldn’t be willing to stop beingHuman he became willing to stopBeing wholly of light approachableTo become human and die as aHelpless creature died in thatJewish rite so that its drenchingBlood could besprinkle in itsDeep cleansing. How can weUnderstan
Poetry
Michael Cadnum
This ruse, enduring for days,will eventually cease, but noweven the birds mistake him for a log,or a stone the fleeting droughthas lifted above the current.Because there is a current, even in this cocoa-dark side-pool, and the solution to hidingso plainly under the sun is to glide asthe magnoli
Poetry
John Ruff
They have the storm of the centuryevery winter in Buffalo. Buffalo is like a pilgrim site for snow.Buffalo is Capistrano for blizzards. Think of the word, “snow-bank.”Think of Buffalo as the Federal Reserve. Imagine Lake Erie as your in-lawsand know how Buffalo feels 
Poetry
Sister Mary David
This is a fearful night.The cloud-wrack scudsHundreds of feet above us, on a blastThat shrieks of war.Wind rips at mighty oaksAnd threatens roof-tops cowering at their feet.Men feel its fingers in their very soulsAnd barricade the entrance, lest the dogWithin, half-tamed, leap up at sound of roaring
Poetry
Jessica Powers
A poem by Jessica Powers from The Second “America” Book of Verse, a collection of the best of America poetry, 1930 to 1955.