Wednesday 21 February 2024

Three Poems by Julie A. Dickson

 



Listing

 

1

kayak       heavy in water

lists to side     paddle drips

cool water over       warm

skin     baked in sun’s oven

even egrets   onshore stand

still         awaiting a breeze

 

2

shopping    planting     reading

a list      set aside   in wait

distracted         cardinal bright

red     on a branch     listing

sways a thin bough   high above

porch      whitewashed railing

 

3

cannot recall      mind overfull

details      duties       activities

no list to remember     thoughts

obscured      browse memory

blank page      unwritten page

head listing         try to recall

 

 

Jar Light, Starlight

 

Running through tall grasses

glass jar in hand, cover off –

 

I can still detect a faint scent

of peanut butter wafting up.

 

He traps one first, a firefly,

lightning bug, mom calls it,

 

his lid on tight, holes punched

for air to get in, bouncing off

 

the sides, looking for escape;

my jar empty, we lie down

 

looking through glass at the sky,

jar light obscuring our vision.

 

Frantic firefly bangs glass over

and over until I cry. Finally,

 

he opens the jar to let it go,

I see starlight through my tears.

 

 

Women, Flowers and a Cow

 

Susan has a flower named for her.

Black-Eyed Susans are abundantly found

on roadside or bower but who was she?

What quite astounds me this the idea that

the actual Susan might have bumped her eye

on a door and bore a shiner, but I implore you

to explain to me why a gold flower bears her name

 

or are cows to blame, since I read that a Holstein

black and white was sometimes nicknamed the same.

Yes, bovines called Black-Eyed Susans

were said to give the sweetest milk, they claim,

but about the flower which is not black and white

and now I’m confused (because of the cow];

 

getting back to the gold and black flower;

there was a certain person who claimed

the title (or fame) for their Susan.

I’d prefer the reason be known, since I wonder

if the poem of this name refers to the same

Susan written by poet John Gay?

 

Or in a long-ago day, gold and black coat of arms-

Lord Baltimore, thus the state flower

of Maryland is the Black-Eyed Susan.

Once more the mystery unfolds to reveal

a woman, a flower and a cow. (how surreal!)

 

Now you know the why and how I began to

feel there was more to the given name of

this gold and black flower. I thought by the hour

of a woman named Susan, of her boarding ships

and the root extracts diuretic, for grips and

remedies for maladies by natives and maybe

this story goes on in a black and gold epic! 

 

 


Julie A. Dickson is a seasoned poet, that is, she has been writing for a long time, prompted by memories, nature and art, or whatever tweaks that writing bug. Her poems appear in various journals including Misfit, Open Door Magazine, New Verse News and Lothlorien. Dickson is a push cart nominee, advocate of captive elephants and companion to rescued semi-feral cats, Cam and Jojo.


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