Tuesday, June 20, 2023

Miscarriage




                   1

Down of no comfort, 
pillows for loss, 
white feathers floated
over the hospital road.

One caught the windshield 
and held a moment, 
small flag of hope, then vanished
in the clearer logic of air. 

On the long last grade 
we overtook the flatbed
stacked with shivering geese. 


                   2

In the garden
the com silk browned.
The ears spiraled
plump from the stalks. 
Beneath the husks 
a green worm worked 
its way down,
gorging itself. 
In its wake the offal
of its life hung. 


                   3

I drew stems of daisies 
and zinnias from buckets
in the florist's shop,
pinched one in my numbed hand.

The woman smiled, said 
they'd cheer a room and not 
to worry, the hurt
stem would mend. 


                   4

The evening storm, first 
only sensed, hit so hard 
it was all there was
to see, to hear.

Gradually it slowed, disappeared.
Silhouettes of trees emerged.
Streetlamps glittered
on the housetops. 
We ate what we salvaged
of the corn, and it was sweet. 

Deep in the night the air 
flinched like a fitful sleeper, 
and the rain stored in the trees
fell again.



--Eric Nelson (1952- ), American poet and professor emeritus at Georgia Southern University, from Poetry magazine, October 1988.

No comments:

Post a Comment