Wednesday, April 22, 2015

What Is It About the Bee?

English: Yellow jacket queen Image copyleft:
English: Yellow jacket queen Image copyleft: (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
What is it about the bee
that makes it bite me so excruciatingly?
Or is it its cousins I’m thinking of?
Either way I do not love
any of that family.
Too bad the bee and the planet are hand in glove—
maybe if we just killed the other three?

© Julianne Carlile

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

The Dream Fish

How Much Is the Fish?
My grandmother used to take us fishing.
Feet dangling from the pier,
she’d bait our hooks and
take the fish off.
Most too small to keep,
she’d throw them back.
Sometimes, we’d get one we could take home.
Once in a while we’d catch a crab.
They were tenacious and hard to shake off,
despite our best work,
and Grandma was often tasked there too.

Years later I had a dream of that shore:
I’d waded in, hands in the water,
trying to catch a great big fish.
The fish was beautiful,
all the colors of the rainbow and more:
it seemed to shine with gold and silver;
it had a preternatural light.
No matter how hard I tried,
I could not grab that fish.

Long after I awoke, the dream stayed with me.
I couldn’t catch it,
and I couldn’t let it go.

© Julianne Carlile

Monday, February 23, 2015

Sestina for My Cat

English: cat
I remember seeing my cat,
his eyes were taken up with black
pupils on the day of his death.
I went home to lie in my bed,
trying not to think of the sex
he never had. Never because alive

is better to a cat than bringing forth life.
At least that's what we say to ourselves, to the cat.
But is it really so important--sex?
It makes the eyes become all black,
which shows emotional interest. A bed
surely has better things to hold than death.

Did my cat enjoy his death?
Is that why his pupils were larger than in life?
And what about the bag, ground, bed?
A good final place for our cat?
Sweet, sweet honey, never hurt a soul, his pupils black,
even though he never had sex.

Why do I have to think about sex
every day, more often even than death?
Sometimes it causes depression, black,
blacker than the light of being alive.
Maybe I should just be a good cat
and go home to my bed.

But when I get home to my bed,
will I start thinking about sex
when I should be thinking about my cat?
My cat after all who is dead,
much worse than being alive.
When I die will my eyes be black?

I'll wrap myself up in the blackness
as I lie at night in my bed,
and be happy that I am alive.
I won't even think about sex.
Instead I'll concentrate on death.
I'll pray instead for my cat.

I'll think black thoughts about sex
in my bed that leads to death,
because I'm more alive than my cat.

© Julianne Carlile

1994

Saturday, November 15, 2014

The Voyage

"S" Is for Silence
Sometimes I wonder about others
when I am on a voyage,
thinking to myself in the silence.
Where do I have to go, how far away,
to lose this incredible burden:
my talent for doing so much harm.

It is not only that I do harm,
but through my neglect the others
shoulder my terrible burden
and go off on their own voyage.
They go their own way, they go my way,
and I am left alone in the silence.

What happens to them in the silence?
They pass ahead into time; is it harm?
Why do I think any way they go is my way?
They are complete minds—they are others.
Yet, we all make the same voyage,
and to be separate is a great burden.

Not to see you as me is a burden,
a painful wall of immense silence
that causes us to go alone on our voyage.
On the other hand, harm
can also be seen in seeing others
exactly as myself. I want my way.

This is why I run or walk away
with my sack, my mysterious burden
which I hide from all the others.
Do you think they know in the silence
that I almost wish to do them harm,
that I am jealous of their voyage?

Do we protect others on their voyage
by making them believe they own their way?
Or could it be that we’re doing harm,
causing them to carry their burden
through an eternity of silence--
a silence that leads each of us to be an other.

On my voyage I’ll remember a burden
that took me away in the silence,
where my harm is equal to others’.

© Julianne Carlile 

1994

Sunday, November 2, 2014

You Go On

English: Swallow in flight. Location: Kalamış,...
You go on, not remembering,
or else don’t care, which is the same,
and I think on the lovely ring
you took back, worn by what’s her name.
Nature consoles me; it has heart,
a heart I did not find in you.
Nature will not leave me apart.
Nature, in fact, is just and true.
The shorn grass falls out in my wake,
the swallows follow on my way,
I resolve to make a mistake.
Before I see the boy, I say,
"I love you," and your voice or God’s,
on the summer wind answers, nods.

© Julianne Carlile

Saturday, October 25, 2014

Dog Psalm

Psalm 9 (album)
Psalm 9 (album) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
As the puppy cries for the mother he will never see again,
So cries my soul for You, Oh God.
As he searches among the blankets for her nipple to suckle,
So search I for You, Oh my Lord
As he resolves to make a home among people not his kind,
So I resolve to make a home among people lost from You.

© Julianne Carlile




Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Star-Crossed

Gold Dust Gertie
I would often ask you for the stories
of how I ended up here
and you would tell me:
I met your grandfather when
he came to work for my parents.
He was a really sharp dresser.
Then you would laugh.

I wondered if you knew what you were really
telling me:
That grandpa had been given used clothes
by your lover, a man you were enamored with
and at first, at the play,
you thought grandpa was him.
(His scent permeated the room;
you could feel him—his essence,
like a star beam covered in gold dust.
But then when you looked,
you saw it was grandpa.)

It must have been really funny,
but what’s really funny is that’s why
I’m here.

© Julianne Carlile


Why?

Why does he not want to see me? Is it all a game? For when I saw him the last time ---Wait, the rain... Maybe he wasn't kind to me...