Cecille Marcato


Tartaruga

Longing to be a Maserati I look to my turtle for comfort.  
I could learn to love this guy since he is what I have,
begin to see him in the moon instead of a man 
or a rabbit (as some insist); pass long moments 
gazing into his nictitating membranes as they nictate —

time I’d rather spend traversing the autostrada
at one-sixty, both tanks filled to the max 
with benzina, blasting Die Walküre on the Blaupunkt; 
if I were a limited-edition 1972 Indy, that is.
Instead, I’ll watch him show off a tarantella he learned

while flipped on his back or see him heave up to the log 
I added to his murky pond where daily I check the pH 
to maintain a constant salutary level.  Rain or shine, 
I’ll feed my turtle blood oranges, stroke the olive drab 
army helmet he must wear for protection, all

warm from sun-bathing or shiny slick from water.  
He will pose for me on a rock.  I’ll frame the picture 
as I would a self-portrait in profile if I were an Italian sports car.  
Patiently I will listen to him go on about his preference of the English
turtle over tortoise, hoping that he, too, doesn’t yearn for the open road. 


Cecille Marcato

Cecille Marcato is a poet and cartoonist currently living in Texas. She supports herself by midwifing student writing from high school through PhD programs. In 2018 she won the Bess Whitehead Scott Scribes Award & Scholarship, and in 2019 was one of twenty finalists for the Tin House Still-Emerging Award. Two of her poems received Honorable Mention in the 2022 Soul-Making Keats Poetry Contest, and her work has been read most recently in Husk. She is a graduate of the Warren Wilson MFA Program for Writers.