Editor’s Note: We are continuing our “Poetic City” series, and this week we are spotlighting Elise Layel in a three-part series. Growing-up in Northern Virginia, 30 miles west of Washington DC, Elise spent much of her time studying dance. She went off to college to be a dance major at Florida State University, in Tallahassee, where she developed a love of visual art, especially works involving the written word.
After graduation, Elise returned to Washington DC and there danced for The Washington National Opera and Tony Powell Music and Movement. She later returned to the South to be around family, but occasionally traveled north to dance.
In 1997, Elise relocated to the Mississippi Gulf Coast and began to write about New Orleans and its surrounding areas, always inspired by the beauty of the oak, the cypress, and the cultural mix that is the south. We are debuting the second poem in her three-part poetry series with her poem” Lay of the Land.”
Lay of the Land by Elise Layel
behind the travels downtown
mayback
low traded facts
no middle ground
girl rack
ysl backpack
gold edged pleats
porched outta streets
parking lot laws
my love of alcohol
seduced by the heat
chained up beliefs
no rules lost and found
steady limits, just a taste
wide up open space
no less set down
plantless underground
old, deep shaded sound
spoken in looming shapes
mist, crepes, ritual space