Hannah M. Matzecki
On the Fifth Day and the Sixth Day and the Seventh Day, Too
Hannah M. Matzecki
On the Fifth Day and the Sixth Day and the Seventh Day, Too
The common carp won’t bite
if it can feel you watching:
a mother told each hatching egg what
a humble thing a body is to have—
frail even when it thinks
it’s a fortress its edges soft
though we call them steel though we
press palms flat to chests and measure
each beat as if it were sugar
precisely spooned from bag to bowl
(the recipe a reminder that once
we had no cake at all—
that the beds we sleep in are fever dreams
and the hands we hold are too)
With swinging knees, we straddle
scratched embankments, offering bread
to little fish rippling through greenish-gray,
reels dangling like lost stars, scanning the sky
for sailing boats that might
lead the long way home while
there, in the water, fin after tail after
fin after tail all flit past wrapped
in a worried mother’s whispers
to keep careful, don’t forget, now
what a humble thing
a body is to have.
Hannah M. Matzecki is a writer, mother, and the editor of Kitchen Table Quarterly. Her poetry has appeared in West Trade Review, Sinking City, and Birdcoat Quarterly, as well as on any refrigerator with those little word magnet tiles. A third-generation Angeleno, she lives in Los Angeles with her family and two demanding cats.
Featured in:
Red Rock Review
Issue 52