SWWIM sustains and celebrates women poets by connecting creatives across generations and by curating a living archive of contemporary poetry, while solidifying Miami as a nexus for the literary arts.

Winter by Carlie Hoffman

When my sisters can’t scrub the oil

from the sick gull’s feathers, they clip

 

its wings, untie the cord that binds

the slow sheet of its body

 

and plant it into a wooden box

drilled with tiny holes. It is my turn

 

to bring the diseased bird

to the breeder across the bank:

 

his medicine knives, his hut occupied

with feeders and soap. But because I am

 

youngest, because a hunter’s moon

is how I locate heaven, I take the gull

 

down the wharf, kneel in an untouched

tract of snow, and quiet its skull with rock.


Carlie Hoffman is a recipient of a 2016 92Y/Discovery Poetry Prize. Her poems appear or are forthcoming in New England Review, Bennington Review, Boston Review, Narrative, Nashville Review and elsewhere. She is from New Jersey.

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Before Landfall by Sarah Carey