From Poetry
NO WHERE, NO ONE
When I found my voice, it was so quiet
no one listened. No one. That was my best love.
And when I came up from the river muck
I found my face; that was like smiling.
The snake does not care, nor the white egret—
and whole flocks of geese, white and Canadian,
settle on the boat landing. Rubbish.
Rubbish and weeds. It was not so quiet
when I screamed; with my face in the water,
not a whisper. Drowned or owned,
I’m now here. My face breaks with a bit of blue—
a bit of bruise and some rawness in the rushes.
© Mary Walker Graham 2005
When I found my voice, it was so quiet
no one listened. No one. That was my best love.
And when I came up from the river muck
I found my face; that was like smiling.
The snake does not care, nor the white egret—
and whole flocks of geese, white and Canadian,
settle on the boat landing. Rubbish.
Rubbish and weeds. It was not so quiet
when I screamed; with my face in the water,
not a whisper. Drowned or owned,
I’m now here. My face breaks with a bit of blue—
a bit of bruise and some rawness in the rushes.
© Mary Walker Graham 2005

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