Hello friends!
It’s been a long, long time since I shared my poetry on this blog. I’ve been writing a lot these past few months in preparation for an exciting project, and decided to post a small collection of favorites as a sneak peek for you guys. I mostly write blank verse – a.k.a. non-rhyming poetry – so if that bothers you, feel free to read this as prose instead. 😉
Either way, I hope you enjoy these poems and the accompanying golden hour photos!

These poems are all new, but you can read my older poetry in book form here.

good morning
On the pillow,
your soft hair slants in all directions.
The dent of your upper lip curves
like the wings of a bird in flight,
flamingo-pink over your open mouth.
Black-fringed eyelashes
sweep all the waking world away.
Your forehead is warm
when i kiss it
awake.

lost in the woods
I need to escape this desperate world
with its hard edges and bronze haze
and revel in lush curves and wild bends.
To sink knee-deep in tangled kudzu vines
that swallow everything
with gnash of round green tongues.
I must shrink to a shimmering speck
beside towering redwoods
with their silent, gripping strength
and verdant fern coverlet.
Or perhaps take an eager amble
down the same old fervent path,
glossy in its pictured memories from long ago.
Even these much-tread forests
with their lyrical birdsong,
silky streams, and warm broken sun
yield something new upon inspection,
like loving the same person
season after season.
The point is not glamour or spice;
the point, my dear,
is to go deep, deep
inside the heart of things
and lose the negligible

melrose caverns
They say this stone-draped cave
held Union soldiers, once.
One could walk above this hole
wholly unknowing,
assuming solid what is
glory-hollowed.
Now the underground descent
is lined with fine gravel
and small lights pointed at
the moist walls.
We crowd inside
and pose in each grand cranny
of nooked and nicked, dripped rock,
warm-tinted and shining.
Such vaulted rooms below the soil
make me pause and wonder
how many hearts are hidden even now
below the surface.

pollen
The glass of this table,
the blue of my car,
the air of this spring
is pollen-coated.
It stars in
scratchy yellow snowflakes
like warmer winter precipitation:
sky motes of dandelion wool;
gets into our mouths and throats
in its persistence.
Evangelism of trees and tulips,
it screams
NEW LIFE
until our heads ache and our throats gasp.
Breathless wind of future beauty,
cover the world in fine
gold dust.

yard visitors
The tidy little wren
in my front yard
keeps one stripe-crossed eye
to the ground and one on me,
her head cocked with caution
and curiosity.
I have sat here long enough
for her mate to
risk a fly-by,
even stopping nervously
under the railing to catch my eye.
I smile and nod encouragingly.
A squirrel, catching the glance,
crosses the street to join us
with staccato undulations.
It parts the grass in movements
alternately fluid and panic-clipped.
I restrain the sudden wish
to gather them all in the skirt of my dress
and stroke their soft fur and feathers.
To murmur
you are welcome here;
I could never harm
such nimble things.

the pastor says i am like peter
The pastor says I am like Peter.
Didn’t say so much as showed,
you understand.
I know a fellow worrier
when I hear one.
I, too, chase the fear of man
down roads in the night.
Then dawn crows,
day breaks on my broken heart,
and I bow my crooked head,
undone.
The rooster follows me
as the clock’s tock
haunts Captain Hook.
But the light follows me
as it did Peter,
and like him,
I will fly away
forgiven.

thunderstorm
Nothing slashes apathy like
the first bite of ripe nectarine
in a June thunderstorm.
Gossamer fragrance on the tongue
juices softly and without complaint
while wind rages and maple branches
shatter madly to the earth
from the kitchen window.
I would like to swallow
a dozen more, but
the rain whips the glass
to get at my face
and so I slip away.

mulberries
I carried a metal bowl and
the stepstool my grandfather made
out to the mulberry tree
the day after we returned from vacation.
Stretching to grasp all drooping branches,
I plucked, one-handed,
the glistening black bounty
of my childhood.
One taste tumbled me
to the bottom of my cousins’ hill
where we stood tiptoe
on the truck’s tailgate
to fill our pails with fruit and chatter
and stain our hands (and feet and face)
deep, sticky purple.
The buckets would be rinsed
in my grandmother’s sink,
startled damp insects
plucked out with wrinkled nose,
and long, juicy berries
packed into a homemade pie crust.
How sweet it was to eat
the pride of our picking
around the Sunday table.

space-sheep
Far away in space,
planets even now roam the sky
like swirled sheep among
starry-flowered fields.
Do space-sheep
graze Saturn’s rings
when our telescopes are turned away?
What goes on,
deep in the dust dunes of
those cold islands?
So much emptiness on those globes,
so many spinning worlds with
their own weather and moons…
Yet no one to lay on those hills
with elbows behind their head
and look up at Earth
shining in the night.
The thought frightens with
its vast loneliness.
All the wide horizon belongs to
burning suns and
hurtling rocks and
the space sheep,
contentedly chewing.

my sister’s car
My sister keeps
e v e r y t h i n g
in her car.
Extra magazines,
extra blankets,
extra clothes.
I pulled them on once—
the dress I was wearing
not fit for the trampoline.
Her short-sleeved shirt
was so red it almost glowed,
and the jeans were just my size,
split on the knee by a tearing hole—
a real one, not one of those
fake distress signals
shaggy with strings and factory scent.
My skin shone white, unsummered,
through the old denim mouth.
Isn’t it a funny feeling
to put on someone else’s clothes?
A sort of Halloween dress-up
on the most ordinary day.
You pull a piece of them
over your head with the fabric
and wonder if it shows.

benediction
One of my friends
walks around with
a welcome mat
always at her toes.
To open her door
is to set off the bell
of her voice in the kitchen:
your name yelled in
delighted tones
as if you are the person
she most longed to see.
Her beaming smile
warms like a benediction
and safens every space.
A package of instant home,
stirred smooth like vanilla pudding.
I want to love like that.

There you go! I hope you enjoyed reading that selection as much as I enjoyed writing it. You can see all my poetry books here. And be sure to stay tuned because there are a lot more new pieces where these came from. 😉
Which poem was your favorite?
Thanks so much for reading, my friends, and have a lovely day!
***Allison***

These are all so good! Is there no end to your talents?
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You’re very kind. 🙂 I’m so happy you liked them!
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Wow, those are great! I didn’t know you wrote poetry, Allison! It’s hard to choose a favorite; each has its own emotion. For a sobering poem, I love “melrose caverns”. “The pastor says I am like peter” brought to mind what our family counselor told me yesterday about forgiveness (my family and I are going through a lot and I tend to blame myself). “Thunderstorm” made me long for our own hoped-for thunderstorms and rain; we’re in a drought in Texas. “Benediction” represents a friend I’d like to be!
Thank you for sharing, Allison! I enjoyed reading along with the beautiful photos. God bless you,
Valentine
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I loved hearing what each poem brought to mind for you, Valentine! That was so special to read. I’m happy you enjoyed the poetry. Blessings (and rain!) to you. ❤️
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I like all the poems, but Benediction made me read it over again, so I’ll say that’s the one I liked best.
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Yay, that’s a great compliment for a poem. It’s one of my favorites too.
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Oooh, I love these!!
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I’m so glad! Thanks Jessica!
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Such creativeness with your poems – keep sharing them with the world!
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I hope to do so. 🙂 Thanks for reading!
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Well done, dear!!
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Aww thanks Mom! 🙂
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I liked them all but pushed to choose a favourite I would say Backyard Visitors – it brought a huge smile to myself as I would also like to sweep them up in my arms. Mulberries came a close second. You are very talented.
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I’m glad you can relate to Backyard Visitors. Wild animals can be so darling sometimes. Thank you so much! I’m delighted you took the time to read them.
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Enjoyed them all! The line I liked best: “fake distress signals”
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I like that one too haha. So glad you enjoyed!
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Does the poem titled “lost in the woods” suggest that you are naturalistic?
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Nope, I’m a Christian. One of the things I love most about nature is how it shows me the Creator’s beauty and love and wisdom! I feel close to God and in awe of His goodness when I, say, take a long walk in the woods, and see the intricate loveliness of His handiwork. 🙂
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