Poetry
… They move through the exit. The drama of their earthly life comes to a close…. These children, unoffending, innocent, … be more given to visitation than most. They wouldn’t have come whole; they would have arrived in bits and pieces, the … girls would have been only a few years older than me. They died as I was born. They were blown to the winds of 1963. I …
Poetry
… Thought draws the imaginary of the past: a knowledge becoming. — Édouard Glissant The … via the Mississippi River. Nearly half of the lake acres studied in America are too contaminated for swimming, fishing, … rocks, and and and. These bodies of land and water are portals of nature. Those portals are basimbi, or cymbee, …
… present a portrait of Jefferson as a man of the heart to complement the massive literature that focuses on his head, … presses on: and every time I kiss thy hand to bid adieu, every absence which follows it, are preludes to that … in 1790, who became his greatest collaborator. He was also, as Burstein suggests, “Jefferson’s greatest blessing.” …
… sex. Here likenesses are emphasized and it has oddly enough come to pass that life here revolves about a sex—woman. … all but compulsory observance have sprung up and not died of chill overnight? We try to explain it, for we are … mothers—that is all! Of course it is not all. Sometimes it points a hidden truth to back it with a strong, splendid …
… States and the U.S.S.R. as the two poles of world politics, compelling other countries to arrange themselves in the … noted policy recommendation of April 1950, NSC 68, embodied the dire suppositions of the times. “The issues that we … in December 1979, especially when White House officials warned the country that Russian forces in Afghanistan …
… in the wars of a small elite whose ambitions, values, and goals failed to relate to the common good. Once the legitimate aspirations of a people to … As a result, the national revolution did not die with the defeat of France. The second point of this …