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a literary journal published by the Black Earth Institute dedicated to re-forging the links between art and spirit, earth and society

Wendy Taylor Carlisle


Election Year

Dear Family Member, don’t think you have to share your theories right now, with the final remnants of winter in the trees, or say what you did in the breath-holding days of mud and drizzle with everything south of town stalled, taking its last frozen breath as farmers rolled the remaining round bales into the pasture for cattle and the county woke up and turned off its heat. Don’t offer medical or political conjecture. Don’t bother. It’s still winter. No peepers by the cow pond, soggy plastic bags still in the street. There will be time for lecture and allegation after the new starts, scattered chartreuse florets becoming electric pink flowers on the redbud. You can wait. The summer conventions will give you occasion for that heart-to-heart. Keep what you believe you know, what you may have spotted on the news, to yourself. Keep it frozen under the last dirty ice. By August, maybe you can confess you don’t know what’s coming next, or have a remedy for the trouble you caused, hidden in winter’s misty scrub.

A Little Patience and We Shall See the Reign of Witches Pass Over

Thomas Jefferson told us we must forbear

and tolerate their small undoings. Larceny and cruelty

in politicians are small undoings. Therefore,

we must be deaf to their clamor and travesty.

 

We must abstain from returning their half-glance,

which should ricochet off our faces like a penny

off a well-made bed. We must be stone carvings,

resembling the ones at the Palais in Vienna,

 

leaning, arm around a shoulder,

arm around a waist, balancing prop and lintel

on their heads. Caryatids standing as one

under tons of masonry, bearing up the roof,

 

waiting for the necromancers’ sway to end,

comforting each other until then.


Storm

I survey the damage after days of wind’s perdition,

a grandmother oak laid flat, root ball up,

a symbiotic dogwood flush against its trunk.

 

The smaller tree emerged years ago,

magicked out of the oak’s colossal side.

The first spring it blossomed, I saluted its tiny crosses.

 

That December, I hung ornaments and fairy lights

on its delicate limbs, reveled in the notion

that tree could birth disparate tree, that they could coexist.

 

Soon, the cornel will die with its host and I must attend

their withering. One small loss, I tell myself.

Other green immensities didn’t survive,

 

nor did Peggy’s havocked house or Larry’s crabapple,

whirled into tango, shedding its flayed boughs.

 

***

Today’s sky is a disingenuous blue, clear

as a good husky’s eye and I take a breath and resist

the need to talk as if the earth had motive, as if

 

it were in business to furnish humans quick retribution

for the greed and plunder they provoke when

their expectations of taking exceed what a planet

 

can possibly give. This wind and hail, the overburdening

rain that loosed tremendous roots,

there is no mind in it. Wanton teardown goes on

 

without will, at its own glacial pace, not in an instant

like a lighting-bearing god, but soon enough the globe

will push us from its soil, same as it wrestled out

 

the grandmother oak, and we will wane like the dogwood,

grasping sustenance from a dying host.

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Wendy Taylor Carlisle lives and writes way out in the Arkansas Ozarks. She has published four books and six chapbooks and is the 2020 winner of the Phillip H. McMath Post-Publication Award for The Mercy of Traffic. Doubleback Books reprinted her 2008 book, Discount Fireworks as a free download in 2022, and Belle Point Press published a new edition of her first book, Reading Berryman to the Dog in 2023.


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