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Poem of the week: Lucifer Takes a Break by Barbara Smith

Last modified on Mon 24 May 2021 06.29 EDT Lucifer Takes a Break transluce. He rolls a cigarette, crimping a white tip and dark tobacco carefully within the rustle of thin paper and remembers, as he snaps a match lit, a time before: just an instant. There was darkness there, but warmth. Yes, gorgeous warmth … a ‘shh’ pressed to his lips before he was handed down. The whisper of white noise … voices? He remembers, how long the fall was, how sheer, how short. He sips the coffee, thankful for its bitter sweetness. Barbara Smith is an Irish poet whose latest collection, the intriguingly titled Ann Askew on the Kafka Machine, is published by Eyewear Publishing, part of the Black Spring Press Group. Smith’s range of subjects is broad, her perspective often gently feminist. She enjoys challenging such male-dominated themes as the vicissitudes of growing up in rural Ireland: see, for example, her potato-peeling takeover of Seamus Heaney and Patrick Kavanagh in the poem

Children of the Reformation by Allan C Carlson

The Population Bomb Orders & Disorders To understand the change in Protestant thought and practice, we need to understand the Protestant vision of family and fertility, particularly as expressed by Luther and Calvin, and how it has changed over the last hundred years. Early sixteenth-century Europe was an era very different from ours. The late medieval Church claimed about one of every four adults in celibate orders, serving either as priests, nuns, or monks or in celibate military and trading groups such as the Teutonic Knights. Over the centuries, the religious orders had, through bequests, accumulated vast landed estates and gathered in the wealth that came through this ownership

The Power of the Pen over the poison in the pot

The Power of the Pen over the poison in the pot By Note: Republished from May 12, 2021 Proclaim liberty throughout the Land . . [but] When a pundit makes a prediction, and it doesn t come to pass, the prophet has spoken presumptuously. So don t listen to him anymore. – Moses (1300s BC) Happy are the people who don t take the advice of the ungodly. They shall be like trees planted by the riverside, and their leaves shall not whither. – David (1000s BC) Men may commit theft as well as adultery with the eye. – Xenocrates (339 BC)) Once you let go of liberty, you won t easily get it back. – Plautus (200 BC)

Bealtaine 2021: Celebrating creativity and resilience in Longford s older citizens

Bealtaine 2021: Celebrating creativity and resilience in Longford s older citizens Reporter: newsroom@longfordleader.ie Ballymahon Library staff members Helen Sheridan and Genevieve Montgomery handing over seed packs to Grace Kearney Ballymahon FRC , Breda Greaves Day Care and Gda Emma Kiernan );   ); 2021 follows one of the most significant and challenging years in recent human history. As we tentatively move towards a post-Covid-19 world, we can begin to reflect upon the devastating impact that Covid-19 has had on all human life. As we know too well, the impact on older generations has been particularly destructive, as well as overwhelmingly isolating. However, during this time, we have also learned more about our capacities for solidarity, togetherness, resilience and social support. The cherry blossoms are in bloom, there is new hope in the air and the month of May each year is dedicated to Bealtaine celebrating the creativity and contribution of our older citizens to

Local History: Was Carbondale, Pa named by author Washington Irving?

Local History: Was Carbondale, Pa named by author Washington Irving?
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