All posts by Eric Robert Nolan

Eric Robert Nolan graduated from Mary Washington College in 1994 with a Bachelor of Science in Psychology. He spent several years a news reporter and editorial writer for the Culpeper Star Exponent in Culpeper, Virginia. His work has also appeared on the front pages of numerous newspapers in Virginia, including The Free Lance – Star and The Daily Progress. Eric entered the field of philanthropy in 1996, as a grant writer for nonprofit healthcare organizations. Eric’s poetry has been featured by Dead Beats Literary Blog, Dagda Publishing, The International War Veterans’ Poetry Archive, and elsewhere. His poetry will also be published by Illumen Magazine in its Spring 2014 issue.

“Wild Geese,” Mary Oliver

You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
for a hundred miles through the desert repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
love what it loves.
Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.
Meanwhile the world goes on.
Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain
are moving across the landscapes,
over the prairies and the deep trees,
the mountains and the rivers.
Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,
are heading home again.
Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,
the world offers itself to your imagination,
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting –
over and over announcing your place
in the family of things.



Plavni (1968). Domestic goose. "Domestic goose"
Plavni (1968). Domestic goose. “Domestic goose”

Reblogged from the Eunoia Review: “Windowpane,” by Wayne Lee

Medice, cura te ipsum.

I’m really good at encouraging OTHERS to get organized and focused. Not always so good at getting organized and focused myself.

Got a whole little physician-heal-thyself thing goin’ on.



Cover to “Justice League of America” #179, Jim Starlin, 1980

DC Comics.

jl

“Or even if it vanish, too/ Beauty, I have worshipped you.”

“August Moonrise,” by Sara Teasdale

The sun was gone, and the moon was coming
Over the blue Connecticut hills;
The west was rosy, the east was flushed,
And over my head the swallows rushed
This way and that, with changeful wills.
I heard them twitter and watched them dart
Now together and now apart
Like dark petals blown from a tree;
The maples stamped against the west
Were black and stately and full of rest,
And the hazy orange moon grew up
And slowly changed to yellow gold
While the hills were darkened, fold on fold
To a deeper blue than a flower could hold.
Down the hill I went, and then
I forgot the ways of men,
For night-scents, heady, and damp and cool
Wakened ecstasy in me
On the brink of a shining pool.

O Beauty, out of many a cup
You have made me drunk and wild
Ever since I was a child,
But when have I been sure as now
That no bitterness can bend
And no sorrow wholly bow
One who loves you to the end?
And though I must give my breath
And my laughter all to death,
And my eyes through which joy came,
And my heart, a wavering flame;
If all must leave me and go back
Along a blind and fearful track
So that you can make anew,
Fusing with intenser fire,
Something nearer your desire;
If my soul must go alone
Through a cold infinity,
Or even if it vanish, too,
Beauty, I have worshipped you.

Let this single hour atone
For the theft of all of me.



800px-Sara_Teasdale._Photograph_by_Gerhard_Sisters,_ca._1910_Missouri_History_Museum_Photograph_and_Print_Collection._Portraits_n21492

You can never go home again.

I went to the beach today, and I even took a ride on the Ship of Theseus — just like I did when I was a kid.

But it just wasn’t the same.



I’m sorry. This really is a ship joke.



Cover to “Spider-Man 2099” #29, Joe St. Pierre & Jimmy Palmiotti, 1995

Marvel Comics.

2099

“In the stainless southwest sky, a great crystal-white star was shining like a lamp of guidance and promise.”

“She opened her eyes and looked about her. They were on the crest of a hill. The sun had set some time since, but the landscape was still clear in the mellow afterlight. To the west a dark church spire rose up against a marigold sky. Below was a little valley and beyond a long, gently-rising slope with snug farmsteads scattered along it. From one to another the child’s eyes darted, eager and wistful. At last they lingered on one away to the left, far back from the road, dimly white with blossoming trees in the twilight of the surrounding woods. Over it, in the stainless southwest sky, a great crystal-white star was shining like a lamp of guidance and promise.”

— from L. M. Montgomery’s Anne of Green Gables



OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
By Guliyev, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3812982

Taste Test = Toaster Strudels

This just in — Toaster Strudels are goddam wonderful.

Update — somebody just told me that there is icing in the box — and that you put it on yourself.  I did not know that!!

Update 2.0 — I suppose that the “ICING INLCUDED” proclamation on the front of the box should have been my first clue.



“Nothing” included in the Casting Off poetry collection.

I got some nice news today — my short poem “Nothing” was included in Down in the Dirt’s newest poetry collection, Casting Off.  (The poem originally appeared in the magazine’s August 2023 Issue.)

You can purchase Casting Off in paperback format here over at Amazon.

Or you can read it for free online right here.

Thanks yet again to Editor Janet Kuypers for choosing to feature my work in this exemplary literary magazine!



Casting Off