Saturday, April 24, 2021

Poem: To Mis-Carry

“I want her back when you’re done.”


They will toss you out, flush you down.

They won’t know to stop when my Grandpa’s eyes –

like sky – are there.

And your nose? They won’t know.

That’s your daddy and sister –

right there!


“I want her back when you’re done.”

Forty-five minutes of waiting

stacked next to the three months

I carried you.

The brown hands of a nurse handing me hospital Tupperware.


“I want her back when you’re done.”

Tucking you right there in the safety of me.

Self-preservation not letting me look,

but little by little my warmth breaking through coldness.

Carrying you home to the wood of our kinfolk:

Loblolly tall and Maple wide.

Scrubby Oak to decorate your spot

with acorn crowns.


“I want her back when you’re done.”

Your daddy – muddy with earth –

Your sister and I searching the hills and

bases of trees for marble quartz.

Sweating out our grief that day.


“I want her back when you’re done.”

At church it starts and keeps up

through five hymns.

Two creeks flowing, meeting up

at my chin and falling into two open palms:

waiting for the Good Lord to dry them up

so we can pass on dry land.


“I want her back when you’re done.”

In the by and by.

                                  by Elizabeth Callahan Steiner
                                  Previously published with Literary Mama, 2017

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