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  This week: Julie Hill AlgerEdited by: Stormy Lady   More Newsletters By This Editor
  
 
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 1. About this Newsletter
 2. A Word from our Sponsor
 3. Letter from the Editor
 4. Editor's Picks
 5. A Word from Writing.Com
 6. Ask & Answer
 7. Removal instructions
 
 
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 | This is poetry from the minds and the hearts of poets on Writing.Com. The poems I am going to be exposing throughout this newsletter are ones that I have found to be, very visual, mood setting and uniquely done.  Stormy Lady  
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 | Pictures of Home by Julie Hill Alger
 
 In the red-roofed stucco house
 of my childhood, the dining room
 was screened off by folding doors
 with small glass panes. Our neighbors
 the Bertins, who barely escaped Hitler,
 often joined us at table. One night
 their daughter said, In Vienna
 our dining room had doors like these.
 For a moment, we all sat quite still.
 
 And when Nath Nong, who has to live
 in Massachusetts now, saw a picture
 of green Cambodian fields she said,
 My father have animal like this,
 name krebey English? I told her,
 Water buffalo. She said, Very very
 good animal. She put her finger
 on the picture of the water buffalo.
 
 On March 13, 1927 in Norfolk Virginia, Rear Admiral James Albert Alger and his wife Majorie welcomed their daughter Julie Hill Alger into the world. Julie spent her childhood in several different schools and states. Rear Admiral James Alger moved his family around a lot, as did most military families at at the time. Julie had a brother David who would follow in his father's footsteps and become a military man himself.  Julie went to college at San Jose State College in San Jose, California. After graduation she began teaching at the University of Massachusetts, then went on to be a Writer In Residence at Cummington Community of the Arts.
 
 Julie married John White, but the couple divorced after the birth of their daughter, Victoria Alger White. Julie worked as a freelance writer of poetry, haiku and short stories.  It was in her later years that her poetry became more serious in nature. This lead her to being known as one of the best  20th Century Contemporary American Poets.
 
 Julie spent her time working on committees and boards to help other writers advance in their field. She was also passionate about advocating against animal abuse and contributed to many feminist causes. She was a member of the Western Massachusetts Chapter of the National Writers Union, the University of Massachusetts Staff Association, Amherst Writers and Artist and the National Organization for Women.
 
 Julie spent the last years of her life living in the same town Emily Dickson lived in Amherst, Massachusetts. She wrote many stories and poetry in her last few years of life. Julie developed breast cancer in the spring of 1992, which then metastasized to her bones by 1994.  She passed away on January 13, 1995.
 
 Death In The Family
 By Julie Hill Alger
 
 They call it stroke.
 Two we loved were stunned
 by that same blow of cudgel
 or axe to the brow.
 Lost on the earth
 they left our circle
 broken.
 
 One spent five months
 falling from our grasp
 mute, her grace, wit,
 beauty erased.
 Her green eyes gazed at us
 as if asking, as if aware,
 as if hers. One night
 she slipped away;
 machinery of mercy
 brought her back
 to die more slowly.
 At long last
 she escaped.
 
 Our collie dog
 fared better.
 A lesser creature, she
 had to spend only one day
 drifting and reeling,
 her brown eyes
 beseeching. Then she
 was tenderly lifted,
 laid on a table,
 praised, petted
 and set free.
 
 Luna
 By Julie Hill Alger
 
 I walk home at August moonrise
 past a bright window.
 
 Inside the room
 an old woman sees the full moon
 and turns off the lamp.
 
 Afterimage shines in my eye:
 pale face, snowy hair.
 
 Moonlight streams over the dark house
 like cool milk.
 When the lamp is out, is the woman
 still standing there alone?
 
 In memory, her upraised hand glows;
 in the house it is darker than shadow.
 I stand on the sidewalk,
 moonstruck.
 
 Metaphysics of an old lamp:
 the shade has less meaning
 than a soul's body.
 
 Physics of a window:
 Glass is thicker than night air,
 thinner than wonder.
 
 The question of whiteness
 bears looking into.
 
 So does a window.
 
 Sounds of a moonlight night
 are softer than rainwater.
 
 Before responding to a face
 at the window, first ascertain whether
 it's looking out or looking in.
 
 Also, whether it's the moon
 or someone else.
 
 None of this, of course,
 explains the perfumes of August
 or the way the moon silvers the grass.
 
 Turn around and look again-
 She is still there.
 
 The first question has not
 been answered. What was it?
 
 
 
 
 Thank you all!
 Stormy Lady
   
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 The winner of "Stormy's poetry newsletter & contest"
  [ASR] is: 
 
 
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 Light and shade of life
 
 
 Even as I go through some trying times
 every dawn, everyday feels truly fine.
 Each day wears a new color, a new quality
 through which I can learn to live with jollity.
 
 
 Minutes too change color and shade.
 Mood and mind make me walk, or wade
 through waves of life that surround me.
 The subtle hand of the Supreme I sometimes see.
 
 
 I wonder why we think so much about our lives,
 when most of the time it is events that govern our ties.
 Pleasure brings hope; pain makes us go through fire.
 The first makes us happy, the second gives reason to cry.
 
 
 If I reign in emotions and thoughts, the culprits
 that damage our health, happiness and small bits
 of satisfaction, perhaps I can rise above the morass,
 and see the very purpose behind life I come to pass.
 
 
 
 Honorable mention:
 
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