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Articles 1 - 30 of 271
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Parasite, Justin Kemp
Release, Sierra Ausfahl
Halls, Jacob T. Devol
Scales, Katie G. Handel
Descartes Heart, Meghan Wells
Devotion: Psalm 16, Anastasia Cook
Command (My Magnificat), Grace Thornsbury
The Gods Below, Hannah Shierman
Soundwaves, Brook T. Fetter
To-Do, Anastasia Cook
Moonseed, Rachel Crane
Quiet, Abigail Moore
Raft, Grace A. Thornsbury
An Artist's Perspective, Justin Kemp
The Fugitive For Mississippi, Meghan Wells
The Fugitive For Mississippi, Meghan Wells
Cedarville Review
This poem pictures an orphan who imitates the desperate recklessness of Huckleberry Finn as he flees his broken past and present life.
Little Things, Rachel M. Noe
Home Remedies, Megan Collom
Castle Crumbling, Emily L. Vest
Castle Crumbling, Emily L. Vest
Cedarville Review
Castle Crumbling is an extended metaphor poem illustrating the futility of holding together temporary, earthly "sandcastles" in the face of inevitable waves of change. I use Biblical references to Matthew 7 in which Jesus talks about how the foolish man built his house upon the sand, instead of a firm rock foundation. The second stanza is intentionally arranged to give the appearance of it falling apart, just like the sandcastle in the poem.
First World, Grace Kohler
Classroom Cantos, Anastasia H. Cook
Classroom Cantos, Anastasia H. Cook
Cedarville Review
This poem contains some of the most memorable ideas that Dr. Heath and my fellow students said during the Intro to Creative Writing class this semester.
Ginori, Dulevo, And Aynsley, Emily L. Vest
Ginori, Dulevo, And Aynsley, Emily L. Vest
Cedarville Review
"Ginori, Dulevo, and Aynsley," named after porcelain manufacturers, is a poem about the teacup collection I look forward to having in the future. It is a piece about longing for stability after years of moving from place to place every few years, and being scared to start such a fragile thing as a teacup collection. The poem ends with said teacup collection, yet a realization that things don't go to plan anyway and shattered and chipped porcelain, or "laugh lines and cracked cups," should be expected.
P.S. The part that references "time" instead of "thyme" is intentional, both for the …
Augur, Rachel G. Rathbun
Augur, Rachel G. Rathbun
Cedarville Review
This poem sketches a character listening for the voice of someone she's lost through her radio.
Editor's Foreword, Rachel Rathbun
Commission, Meghan Wells
Storm Chamber, Alayna Drollinger
Atlas, Alayna Drollinger
Morning Wedding, Josiah Alberghene
Creating The Future, Heidie L. Raine
Creating The Future, Heidie L. Raine
English, Literature, and Modern Languages Student Publications
No abstract provided.
Chasing The Light, Grace E. Mitchell
Chasing The Light, Grace E. Mitchell
Cedarville Review
An eye-catching corner of the Louvre, Paris
To Those I May Never See Again, Evan J. Ellis
To Those I May Never See Again, Evan J. Ellis
Cedarville Review
Five Poems about the poet's relationship with God, people, obscure sci-fi concepts that inspired Halo.