I was named. Not a boy-child, not a song
cried out across the fields, the rising sea
swept out among the fishing boats to score
the littoral strand, making its too brief
pause. No celebration, no facsimile.
The ink drying fast. What is this thing, name,
the disappointment that follows the male
order? My given name. Surge of form and fire,
invoking the dying, the face of future
women who would seed the fields with their hands,
who would knead the joy into some small life
in darkness, in quiet places. No less:
the woman in me born will make it right.
–published in red paint hill, Winter 2016