Dorothy Lune is a Yorta Yorta poet, born in Australia. Her work has appeared in Pinhole Poetry, Pink plastic house, Olit, Ice lolly review, & more. She is compiling a manuscript entitled Lady Bug.
Portrait of Laura Palmer
I cried into my palm
light, I water swans on grass –
I hear the rain was loud
for me; I cleansed the violet
skies that I can now see.
I say their names: Mary, Marylin,
Medusa – I’m with the
holy trinity in a globe – on the
contrary I fall slower &
slower in space’s night, through
pearls who envy my
incandescence. There is a pencil
& a loop pedal – I heared
those damned dreaded mate calls,
I have every response necessary, & fire walks with me.
Mr. Snowman
Bloodshot humid eye excused, as sly as a jewel thief. Astray
windbreaker, beanie, girl in a car, Mr. Snowman
recites his jolly tune. You only ever slipped & squeezed, okay,
I believe you. All I know, your name’s on that icy
mountain, whether your friend aimed a snowball at your eye
like you said or not. Sizzling quarts in the pan, I am
a plastic bead that
does not melt, as sly as cooking oil.
Okay, I believe you: snowy as a window,
frozen dirt, skipping past humid
diamonds astray. All I know, your name’s
on that icy mountain, whether your
friend aimed a snowball at your eye or not.