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21: Saasa-Sasaa

Episode 1 of the Franc Poetry with Favour podcast, hosted by Franc Poetry with Favour, titled "21: Saasa-Sasaa" was published on October 11, 2022 and runs 5 minutes.

October 11, 2022 ·5m · Franc Poetry with Favour

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We know where the power lies. Words! So here’s what we are saying about who we are: “He made Christ who knew no sin to [judicially] be sin on our behalf, so that in Him we would become the righteousness of God [that is, we would be made acceptable to Him and placed in a right relationship with Him by His gracious lovingkindness].” ‭‭2 Corinthians‬ ‭5:21‬ ‭AMP‬‬

We know where the power lies. Words! So here’s what we are saying about who we are: “He made Christ who knew no sin to [judicially] be sin on our behalf, so that in Him we would become the righteousness of God [that is, we would be made acceptable to Him and placed in a right relationship with Him by His gracious lovingkindness].” ‭‭2 Corinthians‬ ‭5:21‬ ‭AMP‬‬
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Cry From An Indian Wife, A by E. Pauline Johnson (1861 - 1913) LibriVox LibriVox volunteers bring you 13 recordings of A Cry From an Indian Wife by E. Pauline Johnson,. This was the Fortnightly Poetry project for January 29, 2012.In 1892 the opportunity of a lifetime came to this young versifier, when Frank Yeigh, the president of the Young Liberals' Club, of Toronto, conceived the idea of having an evening of Canadian literature, at which all available Canadian authors should be guests and read from their own works.Among the authors present on this occasion was Pauline Johnson, who contributed to the programme one of her compositions, entitled "A Cry from an Indian Wife"; and when she recited without text this much-discussed poem, which shows the Indian's side of the North-West Rebellion, she was greeted with tremendous applause from an audience which represented the best of Toronto's art, literature and culture. She was the only one on the programme who received an encore, and to this she replied with one of her favourite canoeing Vision by Joyce Kilmer (1886 - 1918) LibriVox LibriVox volunteers bring you 16 recordings of Vision by Joyce Kilmer.This was the Weekly Poetry project for September 26, 2021. ------Alfred Joyce Kilmer was an American writer and poet mainly remembered for a short poem titled "Trees" (1913), which was published in the collection Trees and Other Poems in 1914. Though a prolific poet whose works celebrated the common beauty of the natural world as well as his Roman Catholic religious faith, Kilmer was also a journalist, literary critic, lecturer, and editor. He was deployed to France with the 69th Infantry Regiment (the famous "Fighting 69th") in 1917. He was killed by a sniper's bullet at the Second Battle of the Marne in 1918 at the age of 31. He was married to Aline Murray, also an accomplished poet and author, with whom he had five children. - Summary by Wikipedia Poets2 Podcast - Poetry for the Ages Colette Marks and Fran Moore, Co-Hosts Two contemporary poets read and review poetry and prose through the ages to present, and interview exceptional poets and writers of today. The podcast is affiliated with and produced by poets2.com. More Goops and How Not to Be Them by Frank Gelett Burgess (1886 - 1951) LibriVox Deep in the heart of every parent is the wish, the desire, to have other adults tell us, in an unsolicited way, just how very polite one’s child is! This perhaps was even more the case in 1903, when Gelett Burgess produced his second book on the Goops. With entertaining cartoons - caricatures of misbehaving children - he described many different breaches of tact and good manners.Burgess wrote several books of poetry on the Goops, each poem describing some significant way in which an unthoughtful or unkind child could offend polite society and often offering the hope that the listener would never behave that way. Ahem! Well, perhaps very few people have succeeded in not acting Goop-like at some point in their lives, but read along with Burgess as he attempts to define, in a humorous fashion, exactly what the differences between “Good” and “Goop” are!(Summary by Mark F. Smith)
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