Jongyoll focuses on communication with non‐human beings in this collection. He describes the nature¡¯s story, including his own life. He thinks that man is just a part of nature. In his poems, human and natural beings are inter‐acting each other as a member of a family in the Universe. Jongyoll thinks that the universe is his house in which he lives together with all kinds of animals, plants, and lifeless beings. As a mediator between human and non‐human beings, he shows a poem as an organic being in which every thing in the world can communicate with each other¡¯s language. Everyone has his own language. Some say with the sound. Some say with the color, action, smell, and taste, etc. To Jongyoll, writing a poem is a process of transferring nature¡¯s words to the readers.
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A Book of Snow
Contest
Spring Sunlight on the Field
Twin Houses
Sounds
Eavesdropping
Bird Chirping
Spring Flood
Spring Wind¡¯s Workshop
Lawn¡¯s Word
Wind¡¯s Word
A Contrabass
Spider on the Tree
Sunday Evening
A Road between the Rice Fields
Humility
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Birthing a Poem
The Wind¡¯s Concerto
Lunch Menu
A Rock Chair
Poem and Cricket
An Acorn in Autumn
Looking into the Goose Pond
Autumn Rain
Autumn Leaves
Leaf
Eulogy for a Maple
Playing with Fire
Sunshine Robbers
November Symphony
Living a Day, the Sun
Cocoon
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Sky
When I Want to See You
Dreaming
Ritual
Photos of My Wife and Baby
Big Smile
My Poetic Son
A Prayer for Jihoon
A Robin in February
My Special Advisors
A Tree Outside the Window
Yearning for You
Ivy Love
Two-Four Time
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A Documentary on the World of a Pond
My Avatar
Cave
A Blind Date
Understanding Another Culture
A Brown Dog
Snail
A Bird
Icarus¡¯ Father
Dong-Hae Public Bathhouse Devotees
My House
Sky Nest
A Blue Sky
A Letter
One-Eyed Night
Star Birds
A Wayfarer
From Asura
Transfusion
The Ganges
I Want to Be a Worm
A Poet¡¯s Life