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Lol stract Poetic images retain the flesh and aroma of experience; memorable images dramatise movements to identity, empowerment and the righting of wrongs. Judith
LOL SWOT Summary SWOT SUMMARY Land O'Lakes clearly has strengths with the economies of scale which in turn provides significant cost advantages. A very successful
> FIRST CRUSH: omg i think my first crush had to have been Danny Schmidt when I was like, two. lol > RIGHTY OR LEFTY: Righty > HOBBIES: hanging out with my friends,
God's bits of wood MikEyBC01: lol berryfine13: i guess berryfine13: do you know any names MikEyBC01: i've pretty much read everything there is to read MikEyBC01:
me how hard he could bang me.and then once were married.then we can get to the facts.lol i want a man who will call me more than at least 5 times a day just to say
Submitted by testingyou on September 12, 2007
Category: Science
Words: 1098 | Pages: 5
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Poetic images retain the flesh and aroma of experience; memorable images dramatise movements to identity, empowerment and the righting of wrongs. Judith Wright uses metaphors of the bud, flame tree growth, compass heart, ageless crimson rose, rising sap, implacable heart, and "lovers who share one mind" to express human and cosmic yearning for fufillment or salvation. In her poems we hear the great mystery of life in the dynamic interdependence of waterfall, tree ferns and mountain gum. Judith Wright's metaphysical connections grow from these observations upon the lives of various trees. Her ethical imperatives, her celebrations of patient waiting and her admiration of nature's abundance and beauty in these poems continue to ignite theological reflections for us today.
Judith Wright's environmental credentials were excellent. Many of us feel powerless about the trees' destruction as we opine that whole trees disappear into the photocopier but we do not wear the passion she had about what that actually means for our own precarious environment. Her focus on the majesty, life-sap and symbolism of the individual tree in several poems across her career is worth revisiting at this time of sustained drought. I write to emphasise that her celebration of the key symbolism of our native trees can evoke theological reflections for an eco-environmental ethic of substance.
Wright's anthologies are sprinkled with celebrations of trees. We find poems on the camphor laurel, cedars, the wattle and the wattle-tree, the cucalypt, the flame-tree, the pepperina, the orange-tree, the scribbly-gum, and gum-trees among others. It ought to be noted that Wright's use of the definite article in these poems' titles both points to the particular genus and to the tree as an emotive symbol. To describe and empathesise with gums, cedars or flame-trees is powerful poetry but to reify them into objects of admiration or symbols of permanence...
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