Wednesday, May 20, 2015
Friday, April 24, 2015
| Bumblebee (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
on purple thistle
a bumblebee lulled and still
sun slips heaven sways
© Julianne Carlile
© Julianne Carlile
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
What Is It About the Bee?
| English: Yellow jacket queen Image copyleft: (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
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
My
grandmother used to take us fishing.
Years later I had a dream of that shore:
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.
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
Sunday, November 2, 2014
You Go On
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) (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
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
Saturday, September 13, 2014
Sonnet for Nicky
| Long-haired Chihuahua (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
He
has a head like a little flower,
A
ruff like a lion around his neck;
All
day long he dreams of having power—
If
he has to charge someone, what the heck?
I
really think he likes to dream of life,
What
it would be like to be on his own,
To
be in charge and to have his own wife—
Especially
when I get on the phone.
But
it is easier to live with me,
To
not worry where his next meal comes from.
I
feel for him then, the poor little bee—
The
turmoil he feels when I tell him come.
So
I live with him and he lives with me,
And
in our faults by lies we flattered be.
© Julianne Carlile
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dying leaves on trees changing color falling down where now is your soul
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dying leaves on trees changing color falling down where now is your soul
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My grandmother used to take us fishing. Feet dangling from the pier, she’d bait our hooks and take the fish off. Most too...


