Greg Rappleye
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New Poems from the Third Coast: Contemporary Michigan Poetry (Great Lakes Books)
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3 editions
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published
2000
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Figured Dark: Poems (The Arkansas Poetry Series)
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published
2007
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A Path Between Houses
2 editions
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published
2000
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Barley Child
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Fish Anthology 2021
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Tropical Landscape with Ten Hummingbirds
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West Branch Spring/Summer 2005 Number 56 Poetry Issue
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published
2005
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Holding down the earth: Poems
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“The languid afternoon. Insects,
droning on into the night. Charon lies
at the bottom of his rowboat,
thinking about his life.”
―
droning on into the night. Charon lies
at the bottom of his rowboat,
thinking about his life.”
―
“Orpheus, Gathering the Trees"
The Metamorphoses of Ovid, Book X, Lines 86-110.
When love died the second time,
he sang at dawn in the empty field
and the bees came to listen.
A little song for the tag alder,
the rue cherry the withe-willow—
the simple-hearted ones that come quickly
to loneliness.
Then he sang for the mulberry
with its purple fruit,
for the cedar and the tamarack.
He sang, bel canto. for the quaking aspen
and the stave oak;
something lovely for the white pine,
the fever tree, the black ash.
From the air, he called the sparrows
and the varieties of wrens.
Then he sang for a bit of pestilence—
for the green caterpillars,
for the leaf worms and bark beetles.
Food to suit the flickers and the crows.
So that, in the wood lot,
there would always be empty places.
So he would still know loss.”
― Tropical Landscape with Ten Hummingbirds
The Metamorphoses of Ovid, Book X, Lines 86-110.
When love died the second time,
he sang at dawn in the empty field
and the bees came to listen.
A little song for the tag alder,
the rue cherry the withe-willow—
the simple-hearted ones that come quickly
to loneliness.
Then he sang for the mulberry
with its purple fruit,
for the cedar and the tamarack.
He sang, bel canto. for the quaking aspen
and the stave oak;
something lovely for the white pine,
the fever tree, the black ash.
From the air, he called the sparrows
and the varieties of wrens.
Then he sang for a bit of pestilence—
for the green caterpillars,
for the leaf worms and bark beetles.
Food to suit the flickers and the crows.
So that, in the wood lot,
there would always be empty places.
So he would still know loss.”
― Tropical Landscape with Ten Hummingbirds
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