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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
A Mother's Countenance, Adrienne M. Krater
What Is Lost, Brianna Martinez
What Is Lost, Brianna Martinez
Cedarville Review
My thoughts on being lost and losing.
Loneliness, Rebekah Erway
Loneliness, Rebekah Erway
Cedarville Review
Loneliness isn't a person but, rather, an absence of people. Or, to be more precise, the feeling of no one's presence except your own. To be lonely, then, as in this poem, is to feel the presence of absence, the companionship of no one, and the company of a person who isn't a person at all.
Tempering Cedars, Adrienne M. Krater
The Middle Onward, Adrienne M. Krater
Antarctica, Rebekah Erway
Antarctica, Rebekah Erway
Cedarville Review
Writing poems about not being able to write is a long-standing tradition among poets. They're an irony in and of themselves: the use of words to tell someone you have no words at all.
Christened Her "Tissue", Lydia M. Matzal
Christened Her "Tissue", Lydia M. Matzal
Cedarville Review
This poem explores the consequences of abortion, revealing how the unborn never experience the simple beauties of nature.
Projections, Tesla Klinger
To The Apples: A Pantoum, Angel Grubbs
To The Apples: A Pantoum, Angel Grubbs
Cedarville Review
This is a little piece of poetry, known as a pantoum. It's not a pure pantoum, as I played with the structure of the sentences a little bit, but the idea is to repeat certain lines throughout the stanzas. It helps to create a scene that maintains unity, and I have found it to be especially good at capturing moments as the form likes to ruminate.
Joni, Shawn Sumrall
Tart Reflections, Adrienne M. Krater
A Christian Response To Art And Literature: A Very Short Guide To Images And Texts, Andrew Graff
A Christian Response To Art And Literature: A Very Short Guide To Images And Texts, Andrew Graff
Cedarville Review
No abstract provided.
Hope Is The Color Orange, Angel S. Grubbs
Hope Is The Color Orange, Angel S. Grubbs
Cedarville Review
This is a nonfiction short I wrote as part of a collection of shorts concerning my home. This piece specifically addresses how to fix something that doesn't seem blatantly broken, but something is definitely wrong. I play with concepts of a the color orange as hope but come to realize orange can mean more than just hope, and life can be as complex as colors.
Love And Adventure: A Calvin And Hobbes Story, Nathan Robertson
Love And Adventure: A Calvin And Hobbes Story, Nathan Robertson
Cedarville Review
When your brother is mentally and physically disabled, it's sometimes hard to know how to love him well. When it's your twin brother you don't really have much time to adjust, you just have to learn as you go. This essay tells the story of one of my greatest lessons in being a better brother, and surprising enough, the answer was found in perhaps the greatest gift I've ever received: my first copy of Calvin and Hobbes.
Organic, Tesla Klinger