Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Publication
- Publication Type
- File Type
Articles 1 - 30 of 45
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Under The Bridge: Poems By Faith Shepherd With Critical Introduction, Faith Shepherd
Under The Bridge: Poems By Faith Shepherd With Critical Introduction, Faith Shepherd
Undergraduate Honors Capstone Projects
The first poem with which I became fully engaged--that is, the first poem with which I interacted beyond one or two readings--was Wallace Stevens' "Autumn Refrain" my senior year in high school. At this point in my life, I was already enamored with literature, and I had written fair amounts of "poetry" for my high school creative writing classes. However, even though I occasionally enjoyed reading poetry and understood that its language tended to be more compact than other types of literature, if I didn't understand a poem after reading it through once or twice I set it aside and …
The Lantern Vol. 72, No. 1, Fall 2004, Nathan Dawley, Victoria Wynne, Thomas Richter, Susannah Fisher, Katy Diana, Sarah Kauffman, Trevor Strunk, Chris Curley, Meghan Bickel, Jan Cohen, Ashley Higgins, David Chamberlin, Jill Williams, Alison Shaffer, Abi Munro, Klaus Yoder, Caroline Meiers, Jennifer Mingolello, Daniel Bruno, Peter Bregman
The Lantern Vol. 72, No. 1, Fall 2004, Nathan Dawley, Victoria Wynne, Thomas Richter, Susannah Fisher, Katy Diana, Sarah Kauffman, Trevor Strunk, Chris Curley, Meghan Bickel, Jan Cohen, Ashley Higgins, David Chamberlin, Jill Williams, Alison Shaffer, Abi Munro, Klaus Yoder, Caroline Meiers, Jennifer Mingolello, Daniel Bruno, Peter Bregman
The Lantern Literary Magazines, 1933 to Present
• Jazz
• Bifocal Brainfreeze
• A Mug of Tea
• Autumn Blend
• Montana Skies
• Madeleine Parenthesis
• Ghosts Come Out at Night
• Time
• 144 Cromwell Road
• Market East
• Secret
• Stream
• What Might Have Been or What Never Was
• Buried Mirth
• Conversations With a Writer
• Churning Through
• Chum-Salmon Intentions
• Cages
• Lola Sang of Green Glass Landscapes
• Peg's Antiques
• Life at 120 Decibels
Inside Front & Back Covers: Poetry, Margie Howe
Inside Front & Back Covers: Poetry, Margie Howe
Bridgewater Review
No abstract provided.
Tygr 2004: A Magazine Of Literature & Art, Jill Forrestal, Erin Laning
Tygr 2004: A Magazine Of Literature & Art, Jill Forrestal, Erin Laning
TYGR: Student Art and Literary Magazine Archives (1985-2017)
TYGR is the student art and literary magazine for Olivet Nazarene University.
2004 Spring Quiz And Quill Magazine, Otterbein English Department
2004 Spring Quiz And Quill Magazine, Otterbein English Department
Quiz and Quill
No abstract provided.
The Lantern Vol. 71, No. 2, Spring 2004, Jay Richards, Tori Wynne, Jonathan Kiernan, Sarah Kauffman, Sarah Napolitan, Nathan Dawley, Larry Barr, Katy Diana, Alison Shaffer, Susannah Fisher, Trevor Strunk, Melanie Scriptunas, Dennis Kearney, John Ramsey, Dan Bruno, Klaus Yoder, Jessica Schoff, Jen Brink, Kate Chapman, Haley Turney
The Lantern Vol. 71, No. 2, Spring 2004, Jay Richards, Tori Wynne, Jonathan Kiernan, Sarah Kauffman, Sarah Napolitan, Nathan Dawley, Larry Barr, Katy Diana, Alison Shaffer, Susannah Fisher, Trevor Strunk, Melanie Scriptunas, Dennis Kearney, John Ramsey, Dan Bruno, Klaus Yoder, Jessica Schoff, Jen Brink, Kate Chapman, Haley Turney
The Lantern Literary Magazines, 1933 to Present
• Football Captain
• Grass Blades
• Identity Theft
• Her Shoulders
• Doing 100
• Watching the
• Fifteen Lines for Five
• Plague
• On the Occasion of Kissing You Less Than I Used To
• Decomposey
• Broomhandles
• Just a Minute
• War of the Words
• Seguidille
• At the End of One's Rope
• The Ride and Joe
• I Want Soft Curls
• Broken
• Stories of a Hypochondriac
• The TV is in Jail & My Mom is the Warden
Science By Accident: Poems Inspired By Science, Ambert Stover
Science By Accident: Poems Inspired By Science, Ambert Stover
WWU Honors College Senior Projects
I have had so many biology and other science classes that I automatically think about the world in scientific terms. Once I found a slug while I was building a trail and gleefully announced to my trail-building companion that terrestrial gastropods were hermaphroditic. To me it meant that the slug I had found was simultaneously both male and female. To my friend, however, it was utter gibberish. This is what I call “science by accident.” Not that it’s a bad thing—penicillin was discovered by accident! But I do have to be mindful of who I am talking with and which …
The New Girl, Angela Marie Meredith
The New Girl, Angela Marie Meredith
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
The New Girl is a collection of poems in which the poet assumes a direct, unfeigned voice. These rhythmic poems cover the deeply personal to the universal and social. The body is presented as a record of experiences both good and bad. Feminist issues pertainingto marriage, work, and sexuality are explored. Whether the poem is about a personal relationship or some aspect of society, it is likely to be multi-dimensional and suggest a duality. Overall, the poems are rooted in the spiritual and attempt to relate, with holistic honesty, a sense of reverence for the impure parts of life.
Qualitative Inquiry Into Art History: A Tribute To Arthur P. Bochner, Lisa M. Tillmann Ph.D.
Qualitative Inquiry Into Art History: A Tribute To Arthur P. Bochner, Lisa M. Tillmann Ph.D.
Faculty Publications
This poem is dedicated to the author's mentor Arthur P. Bochner, Distinguished University Professor, University of South Florida.
Every Rose Has Its Thorn: The Complex Nature Of The Female In Dante Gabriel Rossetti's Paintings And Poetry, Michelle A. Cullari
Every Rose Has Its Thorn: The Complex Nature Of The Female In Dante Gabriel Rossetti's Paintings And Poetry, Michelle A. Cullari
Seton Hall University Dissertations and Theses (ETDs)
.
Owl, Joe Survant
Owl, Joe Survant
Bryant Literary Review
The owl glides in
on secret wings,
silent as a leaf flush.
He knows the quick
motives of chipmunks,
the intimacy of mice.
Horowitz In New York, Tim Bellows
Horowitz In New York, Tim Bellows
Bryant Literary Review
Precise blocks of keys.
He brushes them
and in the ear's inside chamber,
we hear. His fingers white as a baby. Seems the notes
beam across cold deserts-
and hidden sprigs of grass
think to nose their ways
upward, harboring a thin sense
of yellow warmth despite
the presence of ice.
Billy Moran Stands In His Back Yard, Saying His Prayers Over One Last Glass Of Bourbon, Michael Scott Cain
Billy Moran Stands In His Back Yard, Saying His Prayers Over One Last Glass Of Bourbon, Michael Scott Cain
Bryant Literary Review
Our Father, thank you for the bourbon,
for the ice cubes, for the way the color
of the booze lightens as they melt,
for the fragrance that prods the senses.
Same Old, Mary Crow
Same Old, Mary Crow
Bryant Literary Review
The same old story is different with each
re-telling. What did mother say? One of the sisters asserts her truth to the other's
incredulity-- someone has to be right.
Palden Gyatso Comes To Town, Anne Hanley
Palden Gyatso Comes To Town, Anne Hanley
Bryant Literary Review
I always go to hear
Tibetan monks
Even though
I cannot understand
Their words.
Things Pulled Off Refrigerator Doors, Charles Harper Webb
Things Pulled Off Refrigerator Doors, Charles Harper Webb
Bryant Literary Review
That's me in Maui, underneath a tire-sized hat,
pointing surfward as if I've just invented
waves. There's Katie wincing on a fern-
draped ledge, splashed by a mile-high
waterfall.
Touching My Reflection, Michele Heather Pollock
Touching My Reflection, Michele Heather Pollock
Bryant Literary Review
I peer into a mirror
of last night's rain
In A Field Near Sardis Dam, Louis Bourgeois
In A Field Near Sardis Dam, Louis Bourgeois
Bryant Literary Review
Silence. A scarecrow flickers in the wind.
The corn is dead. Geese speckle the horizon,
followed by crows and herons.
In Oxford Cemetery, Louis Bourgeois
In Oxford Cemetery, Louis Bourgeois
Bryant Literary Review
You thought because
the trees moved
and the stones didn't
Dress Rehearsal For Utopia, Karen Donovan
Dress Rehearsal For Utopia, Karen Donovan
Bryant Literary Review
We're glad they made Clear Falls.
The white rocks love the water,
the water loves its splash and brim.
A Persistent Error, Dorinda Clifton
A Persistent Error, Dorinda Clifton
Bryant Literary Review
My-Hundred-Year-Old Window
I live on the second floor of an old building. One room, one window. Having only one window keeps me focused on the life I can see within its perimeter.
The Wounded, Dave Cappella
The Wounded, Dave Cappella
Bryant Literary Review
The one-legged pigeon understands
the loneliness of the man.
Hobbling under the patio table
behind a chair, the bird waits
for a morsel from the stranger.
My Grandmother's Slops Bucket, David Thornbrugh
My Grandmother's Slops Bucket, David Thornbrugh
Bryant Literary Review
My grandmother kept a slops bucket
behind a curtain of blue-flowered calico cloth
tacked over the bottom shelf in her kitchen pantry,
Poem Written In Revlon's "Fire And Ice" Lipstick, Marie Harris
Poem Written In Revlon's "Fire And Ice" Lipstick, Marie Harris
Bryant Literary Review
I secretly wanted to be the girl
you dreamed about as you stood
staring at the phone number
Homage To Montale, Baron Wormser
Homage To Montale, Baron Wormser
Bryant Literary Review
This morning
The hummingbird's
Pure zigzag
Surprises you.
The indifference to
The long steps
Of your mood.
The Boys Of Night Winter, Paul Sohar
The Boys Of Night Winter, Paul Sohar
Bryant Literary Review
Their puffy winter jackets lifting their
faces high above the horizon
the boys troop in from the snow
Concrete Membrane, Rachel Lewis
On That Sidewalk, Mary Beth Baustian
Imagine: Reaching Back, Nate Andrews