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dionne-charlet
dionne-charlet
Dionne Charlet (Dionne Cherie Baker) is a poet and freelance writer. Painting with words outside the by-lines is her trademark. / / Dionne began studying Advanced Poetry Writing at the University of New Orleans under Richard Katrovas during her pregnancy. Her son now has a son of his own. For Charlet, the mystery of femininity elicits a voice inherently compressed within the written ring of her own perspective. Through the verses of imagery, she seeks to arouse metaphor with a spunk-infused tease of color and fantasy through the wilds of the ages. Those Charlet calls her own thrive in the whirlwind before a fusion of poetic forms honed and glimmering with abandon lost to care in the throes of words.
Encounter shellac where the live oak could balk in sways of stomata to spare shadow from earth swaying like Eve in Persephone’s wake should a frenzy of madrigals cluster to feast where her prodigal snake once faced sentience. A tree grows in reaches long since she passed fragrant lacking tulips within a thicket of moss. Now my soul skirts the path of Icarus to bathe in the cerulean beyond reflection your eyes have consumed from the sky like a beast coaxing the blessings of the wind. I was placed here for you. A voice lichened in cypress knees carries with the caress of her woods pressing me forward into the dew and new ground enriched with instinct into the roots of palmettos shielding the glade of tomorrow still ripe with blackberries where she whispers with thistles.
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Nov 6, 2016
Nov 6, 2016 at 2:26 AM UTC
Some Other Nature
Sands traverse oceans to envelop me within the coercion of a dream of Egypt as I search the turquoise of the medallion in my hands to match the gray-blue of his eyes. Too long have I willed for him to sail the Atlantic, stride through the door, and sweep me from haunting this view of London. But for now I am left to my own image and a pane, so I muster the meat of my palm within this sleeve of lace to brush it across the glass for a clearer look, yet my efforts have revealed no more than engorged eyelids reflected… manacles of me. Behest of self, maniacal I am slated to perform involuntary tedium, hopeful to unlock deeper meaning within each hieroglyph, once so purposefully etched in a semblance of bronze. I long to surrender to the warmth of the taste of iron caught in his sights over a tomb blanketed in gold. I will come for you, Daughter of Heaven and Earth. Spontaneous peristalsis of phrase connects with the drop gurgling through the candid quiet and I wonder if the image that now reflects would indulge him, or if he might ****** the lock of dark hair that he cropped from my neck with the skill of an assassin when our paths first crossed in Cairo. Time has softened the image I hold of him; his eyes are satin, burning like a flag still waving as his army advances over our forbidden dig. There is something sensation-like in downfall… copious saline embodies the fractal curve. I found no scrolls of the Book of the Dead. Here in my olive skin I rot like a peach that’s been left in a satchel forgotten to dust of the ages disturbed by picks and axes that strike with the determination of discovery. A peach, never to be savored; never to nourish or to pleasure, or be trampled by insects and carried off in pieces to the hollow of the ant queen. My eyelids are hard to turn like wet pages forced to envision a river that is not the Nile where I am held within the binds of propriety, corsetted, bustled, and locked out of Egypt dammed from the salvation of even an intermittent Dutchman’s finger by dunes and shores and footfalls to find words that stream in liquid resonance where firm succumbs to self and I can feel passion writhing through my intangibles. Thusly, clouds form over a city that blackens and distorts the way a river's reflection of my face would ripple from the plunging body of a dove, belly-up, encased in wings, and two thousand miles from him. Arousal is a moccasin seethed in spasms of peristalsis and musculature toward the beckoning pulse of breast. Any hope for contact collapses into flesh, venom sheathes each corpuscle, and a woken neck flails in judgment before the truth in his eyes under the shadow of the Great Pyramid where Ramses II lies supine across the Turin Papyrus. I imagine the other side of me and where she might reflect when all that there is in such a study contributes to my wanting to wreak my bellied freedom beneath crevices that sink as crevices do in downward angled layers to withstand the ages. Dark hair gleams in contrast, more for strip of scalp than the trickle of red down my back. Breached like sugar that candid— starburst wings of Monarchs dripping ancient like sunsets over magenta and milky mauve in the reeds— my ankles revealed and inverted to the sky they glean, yet... his arrival is delayed when the pistol ***** three times. The still of my breast compounds with the steady union of the dark, and somewhere denial flows with the sands. So cycles change, like a fable for Eternal. “Daughter of Heaven and Earth,” written by Dionne Charlet, appears in print in Cairo by Gaslight, the second anthology in the By Gaslight Series from New Orleans small press Black Tome Books. Books in the series include New Orleans by Gaslight (ISBN 9780615801186) and Cairo by Gaslight (ISBN 9781516961528). Both collections feature poetry by Charlet, under the pseudonym Dionne Cherie. Look for the upcoming anthology Paris by Gaslight, which will feature a poem of the same title by Dionne.
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Nov 4, 2016
Nov 4, 2016 at 1:41 PM UTC
Daughter of Heaven and Earth
Sands traverse oceans to envelop me within the coercion of a dream of Egypt as I search the turquoise of the medallion in my hands to match the gray-blue of his eyes. Too long have I willed for him to sail the Atlantic, stride through the door, and sweep me from haunting this view of London. But for now I am left to my own image and a pane, so I muster the meat of my palm within this sleeve of lace to brush it across the glass for a clearer look, yet my efforts have revealed no more than engorged eyelids reflected… manacles of me. Behest of self, maniacal I am slated to perform involuntary tedium, hopeful to unlock deeper meaning within each hieroglyph, once so purposefully etched in a semblance of bronze. I long to surrender to the warmth of the taste of iron caught in his sights over a tomb blanketed in gold. I will come for you, Daughter of Heaven and Earth. Spontaneous peristalsis of phrase connects with the drop gurgling through the candid quiet and I wonder if the image that now reflects would indulge him, or if he might ****** the lock of dark hair that he cropped from my neck with the skill of an assassin when our paths first crossed in Cairo. Time has softened the image I hold of him; his eyes are satin, burning like a flag still waving as his army advances over our forbidden dig. There is something sensation-like in downfall… copious saline embodies the fractal curve. I found no scrolls of the Book of the Dead. Here in my olive skin I rot like a peach that’s been left in a satchel forgotten to dust of the ages disturbed by picks and axes that strike with the determination of discovery. A peach, never to be savored; never to nourish or to pleasure, or be trampled by insects and carried off in pieces to the hollow of the ant queen. My eyelids are hard to turn like wet pages forced to envision a river that is not the Nile where I am held within the binds of propriety, corsetted, bustled, and locked out of Egypt dammed from the salvation of even an intermittent Dutchman’s finger by dunes and shores and footfalls to find words that stream in liquid resonance where firm succumbs to self and I can feel passion writhing through my intangibles. Thusly, clouds form over a city that blackens and distorts the way a river's reflection of my face would ripple from the plunging body of a dove, belly-up, encased in wings, and two thousand miles from him. Arousal is a moccasin seethed in spasms of peristalsis and musculature toward the beckoning pulse of breast. Any hope for contact collapses into flesh, venom sheathes each corpuscle, and a woken neck flails in judgment before the truth in his eyes under the shadow of the Great Pyramid where Ramses II lies supine across the Turin Papyrus. I imagine the other side of me and where she might reflect when all that there is in such a study contributes to my wanting to wreak my bellied freedom beneath crevices that sink as crevices do in downward angled layers to withstand the ages. Dark hair gleams in contrast, more for strip of scalp than the trickle of red down my back. Breached like sugar that candid— starburst wings of Monarchs dripping ancient like sunsets over magenta and milky mauve in the reeds— my ankles revealed and inverted to the sky they glean, yet... his arrival is delayed when the pistol ***** three times. The still of my breast compounds with the steady union of the dark, and somewhere denial flows with the sands. So cycles change, like a fable for Eternal. “Daughter of Heaven and Earth,” written by Dionne Charlet, appears in print in Cairo by Gaslight, the second anthology in the By Gaslight Series from New Orleans small press Black Tome Books. Books in the series include New Orleans by Gaslight (ISBN 9780615801186) and Cairo by Gaslight (ISBN 9781516961528). Both collections feature poetry by Charlet, under the pseudonym Dionne Cherie. Look for the upcoming anthology Paris by Gaslight, which will feature a poem of the same title by Dionne.
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99
Plumped rouge with pigment her lip fills to graze the ******** intent to disquiet the likes of de Sade autografted with ocular detachment should a Marquis wish to harness the song of the morning within a bandolier of Seine to ensnare any bustled Persephone gilted by discharge of ions into a ménage of torment through the Porte des Lions. Hers is the tincture of doxy caramelized and debrided of naivety, empowered by the eve of invention, swollen to curves and grounded in Paris. Illumination defies pervasion down to every gear and pulley she has hushed through mechanization and lulled by steam, swaging a cacophony of flickers encased in glass by the Lady’s watch, where every rivet of her plate glisters silken reverberation in cascade, elegant, caged, and towering, outspoken in silence, ever challenging the Champ de Mars. "Paris by Gaslight," written by Dionne Charlet, is the title poem to be featured in the upcoming steampunk anthology Paris by Gaslight, the third anthology in the By Gaslight Series from New Orleans small press Black Tome Books. Look for the first two collections of poems and short stories set in Victorian Times, New Orleans by Gaslight (ISBN 9780615801186) and Cairo by Gaslight (ISBN 9781516961528). Both collections feature poetry by Charlet, under the pseudonym Dionne Cherie.
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Nov 3, 2016
Nov 3, 2016 at 2:44 PM UTC
Paris by Gaslight
The soles of my sandaled feet maneuver lumps of brick as if by rote and I am compelled to face the square. Almost noon on Sunday, I seek the impromptu mall of Tarot readers and caricaturists where palmists merchant to St. Peter, each an homilist to the choir of steel drums tinkling near the alley. Alternate drummers motion bills and coins into the walled cache of a tattered suitcase. Tall arched doors spill into the welcoming flicker and scent of melting wax as an older woman enters, the heft of her rosary bending her near genuflection. Familiar passages resonate; memories lead to Sacraments. Questions filter through me like confessions, and I note what lingers of my faith. Still. I feel too guilty for Communion. Bless me Father, for I have sinned. Even as I turn to You, my right toe numbs and my ear begins to itch. My ******* constrict and my throat presses into the wet. Inject me, Father, with Noah's syringe – the one that jazzed him to build that floating zoo – that I may track my path before the Rise. Or, let me don Your priestly robes, and turn some wine to Corpuscles divined to see beyond my own plank or preach the Beatitudes to yawning zealots. Is there a mirror on that altar? As the cathedral entrance closes, I am who I am —and I am not worthy— standing my shadow's length from the shallow steps. Azaleas blooming at my back, I remember when religion grew within my mind fed weekly by carvings on a chalice in a chapel on Esplanade left to nature post Katrina. Spanish moss greys the white beard of God where the dome of the fresco fractures. Phalangeal hues of sun eclipse the floating dust from breaks in stained glass stations. Masses of blackberry and kudzu drape a pregnant mass over the sculpted marble of the cross. The chiseled palms of Christ extend as ropes of growth unravel from His Torso like a figment of my reconciliation. Vines fall to form a brambled crown atop a broken stone between the great doors where the Bible swells open. *A version of this poem has been previously published in the anthology Louisiana Inklings: A Literary Sampler (29 October 2013). **"Sanctuary" was featured as Poem of the Day and  added to the Poetry Club on Scriggler.com
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Nov 3, 2016
Nov 3, 2016 at 2:38 PM UTC
Sanctuary
The soles of my sandaled feet maneuver lumps of brick as if by rote and I am compelled to face the square. Almost noon on Sunday, I seek the impromptu mall of Tarot readers and caricaturists where palmists merchant to St. Peter, each an homilist to the choir of steel drums tinkling near the alley. Alternate drummers motion bills and coins into the walled cache of a tattered suitcase. Tall arched doors spill into the welcoming flicker and scent of melting wax as an older woman enters, the heft of her rosary bending her near genuflection. Familiar passages resonate; memories lead to Sacraments. Questions filter through me like confessions, and I note what lingers of my faith. Still. I feel too guilty for Communion. Bless me Father, for I have sinned. Even as I turn to You, my right toe numbs and my ear begins to itch. My ******* constrict and my throat presses into the wet. Inject me, Father, with Noah's syringe – the one that jazzed him to build that floating zoo – that I may track my path before the Rise. Or, let me don Your priestly robes, and turn some wine to Corpuscles divined to see beyond my own plank or preach the Beatitudes to yawning zealots. Is there a mirror on that altar? As the cathedral entrance closes, I am who I am —and I am not worthy— standing my shadow's length from the shallow steps. Azaleas blooming at my back, I remember when religion grew within my mind fed weekly by carvings on a chalice in a chapel on Esplanade left to nature post Katrina. Spanish moss greys the white beard of God where the dome of the fresco fractures. Phalangeal hues of sun eclipse the floating dust from breaks in stained glass stations. Masses of blackberry and kudzu drape a pregnant mass over the sculpted marble of the cross. The chiseled palms of Christ extend as ropes of growth unravel from His Torso like a figment of my reconciliation. Vines fall to form a brambled crown atop a broken stone between the great doors where the Bible swells open. *A version of this poem has been previously published in the anthology Louisiana Inklings: A Literary Sampler (29 October 2013). **"Sanctuary" was featured as Poem of the Day and  added to the Poetry Club on Scriggler.com
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63
Mold me a helm of platinum. Plate my neck in ornate roses and arc both ******* in tongues of steel. Spill an hourglass of silver sheets to silhouette each torso curve. Sculpt iron vines over each hip. Caress my keep in chastened press; form gold like liquid down my legs. Engrave a crest of two joined doves upon my hexagonal shield. String leather sheathes with your golden hair. Equip a morning star with spires that mock the dullness at your rest, yet forge my sword of diamond strength formidable as your excited state. Look on me where I stand armored. Embrace away my fancied suit. Please… lay me down, Love, gently Love, and place a flower in my hair.
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Nov 3, 2016
Nov 3, 2016 at 2:34 PM UTC
Armor Me