Poetry
The Hawk
The  forest is the only place
  where  green is green, and blue is blue.
  Walking  the forest I have seen
  most  everything. I’ve seen a you
  with  yellow eyes and busted wing.
  And deep in  the forest, no one knew.
—Wendy Videlock
  (originally published in Poetry)
To  the Woman in the Garden
You  did not notice the roses,
  the  stones, or even
  the  toad, the child,
  the  sapling, the totem
  pole,  the crow, the dusk,
  or  the hummingbird,
  the  mantis, the dove,
  or  the hushed
  word
but  spoke instead,
  but  spoke at length
  of  the horrible
  horrible
  horrible  world.
—Wendy Videlock
(originally published in The New Criterion)
Dear Universe
	In all this calm,
	in all this mist,
	these vague shaped
continents
	begin to drift.
	A finger lifts,
	falls again.
	A foghorn sounds,
	passionless.
	Do you wonder
	what we are
	in all this calm,
	in all this mist.
Wolf prints.
Red clay.
A slender wrist.
Murder. Magic.
Ballet.
	—Wendy Videlock
	(originally published in Rattle)



