for a north Louisiana harvest home
Eccle. 1:9
Late autumn dusk, the hock-cart drawing near,
The time of year and day becoming one
As all that I have thought and seen has done
In ways I made my own by staying here:
The purple asters rising toward an end
Under the stars whose given name they bear,
The sky and ground so close together there,
With pansies for remembrance in a wind
Chilling young sparrows pecking seeded grass,
Bringing a season they have never known,
While led by older geese the geese press on
In southbound wedges homing as they pass.
And right below the stars and moon and sun,
The same that shone on Greece and Christendom,
I’ve come to see this place from which I come
By my own lights now time is all but done,
Still staying put where I was put to stay,
The only way to go to find The Way.
Mark Twain’s Religion
In 2014, when Kevin Malone’s opera Mysterious 44 premiered in Manchester, England, the production featured narrative voiceovers…
The Strange Sadness of Blue Moon
Because we live in an age of cheap cynicism and alleged sophistication, many viewers of Richard Linklater’s…
Caravaggio the Destroyer (ft. Jaspreet Singh Boparai)
In this episode, Jaspreet Singh Boparai joins R. R. Reno on The Editor’s Desk to talk about…