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Poetry. "As a poet, Barfield is an alchemist distilling language from calla lilies, port wine, and skulls. Indeed, he approaches a wide range of subjects with extreme care, in the manner of a terrestrial saint on pilgrimage toward a visionary existence. His poems celebrate the unknown in the known with such subtle intensity that mystical life is achieved. With each poem, it seems, a sacred language emerges until the poem's very bones vibrate organic sounds. What radiates from these linguistic bones are brilliant waves of consciousness"-Alan Britt.
Poetry. "The imagery in Britt's poems connects itself to an idea or an emotion and is, therefore, deeper and more meaningful than embellishment or decoration. In this manner, a linguistic experience is born, one that is palpable to the five senses. No accent pieces needed-Britt does more than get close to the bone-he gets to the heart of the thing itself and makes it resonate with something deeper than exactitude. His images are painted as if vibrating, as if his letters were tuning forks. Britt's imagery, therefore, evokes a mood and meaning simultaneously"-Dr. Maura Gage, from her introduction.
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A majority of surnames came from Europe.
Immanentists, a group of poets including Alan Britt, Silvia Scheibli and Steve Barfield. His poems, Duane Locke writes in his introduction to this volume, "are linguistic rituals to exorcise the false values of society and the voice of the self-alienated who has been spoken by others, not speaking a self, an incommensurable self, the self of darkness that is light .... Roth overcomes the evils of the public order of language, rescues us from the fallen state of language, restores us to a linguistic garden of Eden."
Covers receipts and expenditures of appropriations and other funds.