Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde ValleySedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley
    Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley
    • Home
    • Sedona
      • Steve’s Corner
      • Arts and Entertainment
      • Bear Howard Chronicles
      • Business Profiles
      • City of Sedona
      • Goodies & Freebies
      • Mind & Body
      • Real Estate
      • Sedona News
    • Opinion
    • About
    • The Sedonan
    • Advertise
    • Sedona’s Best
    Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde ValleySedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley
    Home»Sedona News»Sedona Lit: Poems of the Sedona Light, Part Three
    Sedona News

    Sedona Lit: Poems of the Sedona Light, Part Three

    September 5, 20164 Comments
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit WhatsApp
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Reddit WhatsApp

    Sedona Lit is a series by Dr. Elizabeth Oakes, an award winning poet and former Shakespeare professor. A Sedonian of three years, she will highlight the literature, written or performed, of Sedona, past and present.

    photo_elizabethoakes_216By Elizabeth Oakes
    (September 5, 2016)

    Poets need community. Few want to hide their poems away in a drawer, no matter how painful it is to stand before an audience. Even the reclusive Emily Dickinson, who didn’t leave her home after age thirty, published several poems in her lifetime and sent others to a leading scholar. In one of her nearly 1800 poems, she said that sharing is essential:

    Own In Sedona

    Own In Sedona

    A word is dead
    When it is said,
    Some say.

    I say it just
    Begins to live
    That day.

    Poetry is instinctive. As a child, we loved the fun of rhyme, and still do. That’s why songs rhyme. As adults we use simile and metaphor, two stocks in trade of the poet, for instance, in cliches, which might be called folk poetry. For instance, if we say, “I’m as hungry as a bear,” that’s a simile. If someone says, “He/She’s my rock,” that’s a metaphor. Both describe the world through the imagination.

    20160905_lit1Poets have been around as long as language. Sanskrit, the oldest of the Indo-European languages, from which English is derived, has a word for poet: “kāvi,” meaning “maker.” Poetry and stories were oral (like slam poetry today) for millenia, so who knows what was lost.

    The roots of words themselves may come from the very core of the universe. Sanskrit is thought to “be the language of nature herself, composed of the primordial sounds that promote order in the evolving universe,” according to Alistair Shearer, an expert on the Upanishads. It’s an apt coincidence that in English, there is only one letter between word and world.

    Sedona Gift Shop

    Below are four Sedonians who qualify as “makers,” sharing their view of the universe as it materializes in Sedona with words:

    Light pierces darkness and the world awakens
    True colors are revealed by light’s illumination
    Inner growth reaches outward for light’s connection
    Shadows, simply illusion, are relative to light’s orientation
    Contrast is light’s domain, the magic touch of creation
    Christine Marie, Life Coach, Writer

    20160905_lit2

    The rocks
    aglow with gold,
    holding my eyes like moths to a flame
    left by the ancestors of our lands
    bringing joy to all who walk this way.
    Jan Justice Oswald, Arts Supporter

    20160905_lit3Morning glory . . . Why does
    diffused light bring depth of blue star color
    in morning hues
    of peach and salmon? My eyes dance.
    Kenyon Taylor, Craniosacral Therapist, Designer

    How to Enjoy a Sedona Sunset
    Listen to the embering rocks
    whisper your true name
    like a gift from the sun.
    Bill Ward, Writer

    Thanks to the above and all the poets and photographers who shared their light: Annie Berardini Rivers, Beverly Kievman Copen, Martha Entin, Gary Every, Randy Fridley, Kate Hawkes, Nicholas Kirsten Honshin, Barbara Litrell, Kimberly Crowe, and Ron Chilston.

    Own In Sedona

    4 Comments

    1. Kenyon on September 5, 2016 11:43 am

      What an honor to be included in this panoply of talent. Thank you!!

      • Elizabeth Oakes on September 6, 2016 2:28 pm

        Thank you, Kenyon! There will be others, and I hope you’ll contribute to them too!

    2. Randall Reynolds on September 8, 2016 8:33 am

      Always a treat! Such a wonderful venue for Sedona!

      • Elizabeth Oakes on September 8, 2016 1:36 pm

        Randall, Hope you’ll contribute to the next poetry party. Although you don’t live here now, once a Sedonian, always a Sedonian!

    The Golden Idols of our Lives

     People want to use spirituality just like they want to use God. Fix me. Heal me. Help me. Awaken me. Overcome my enemies. Help my side win. People use money, power, force, and other people, exerting influence to the same end.

    Click Here for More

    Sedona Real Estate
    The Sedonan
    The Sedonan Summer 2025
    Nampti Spa
    House of Seven Arches
    Need More Customers?
    VV Wine Trail
    Verde Valley Wine Trail
    Bear Howard Chronicles
    Recent Comments
    • JB on Good vs. Evil
    • Koz on Sedona Film Festival presents Movie Soundtracks in Surround Sound March 12
    • Grant Castillou on LLMs Sentience: A World Appears, Book on AI Consciousness, by Michael Pollan Failed
    • Baseke Peter on Apply for Small Grant Program funding
    • TJ Hall on Nothing Ends It Anymore
    • @RapidResponse47 on Nothing Ends It Anymore
    • JB on Nothing Ends It Anymore
    • Jill Dougherty on Sedona’s Next Leaders Must Serve the Whole Community—Not Just Their Own Frustrations
    • JB on The Fragility of Nations — Iran Under Threat, America Under Strain
    • JB on The Fragility of Nations — Iran Under Threat, America Under Strain
    • Steve Segner on The Fragility of Nations — Iran Under Threat, America Under Strain
    • JB on Nothing Ends It Anymore
    • JB on Nothing Ends It Anymore
    • TJ Hall on Nothing Ends It Anymore
    • JB on Nothing Ends It Anymore
    Archives
    A Step Up
    The Sedonan
    The Sedonan Summer 2025
    Ode to Sleeplessness
    © 2026 All rights reserved. Sedona.biz.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.