Some helpful links, part 2: Collected poetry

I am nearly done going through my hundreds of bookmarks (a task that stretches and stretches the more you do it, seemingly), and here are the poems I’ve found there. I highly recommend all of them, even (sometimes especially) the ones which didn’t format nicely as embedded links. Going through these again was a rich experience — I have to re-read every page to see if it’s still worth keeping, and the poems, without exception, were.

https://www.ekstasismagazine.com/poetry/2023/let-god-become-the-quiet-in-all-things

https://longbowsong.blogspot.com/2015/01/the-sword-of-surprise-by-g-k-chesterton.html

https://oblations.blogspot.com/2017/04/samaritan-woman-sheila-rosen.html

https://aclerkofoxford.blogspot.com/2011/08/o-heart-i-do-not-dare-go-empty-hearted.html

https://www.poemhunter.com/poem/braiding/

https://sarahclarkson.com/thoroughly-alive/2020/2/27/on-my-ashless-wednesday-a-poem

http://rebecca-writes.com/rebeccawrites/2008/3/17/poetry-of-the-cross-jesus-of-the-scars.html

https://platitudesundone.blogspot.com/2013/12/thou-shalt-not-kill.html

https://gkcdaily.blogspot.com/2014/01/a-song-of-defeat.html

http://www.phys.unm.edu/~tw/fas/yits/archive/oliver_inblackwaterwoods.html

Would you believe that this was the smallest category of all of them so far? The largest I think was resources for writing, which is going to have to be broken into several posts by sub-categories. (And how did I not have a tag for theology?)

See you next time for I’m not sure what topic next! Maybe medieval textiles and material culture. . .

About Nolie Alcarturiel

I enjoy practically anything to do with medieval history, including the domestic arts, with an especial emphasis on the Anglo-Saxon era. In my spare time I read endlessly, do medieval living-history, hold philosophical debates at the drop of a hat, and write books on even slighter provocation.
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