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.

Fish Hawk

As if God kicked her
from the lip of Heaven,
she falls.

Talons spread,
she cuts the dawn
with her body.

She should slice the lake,
wrap the trout
in the hard bands of her claws,

be off and away, leaving
silent circles
behind her body.

She falls. Misses.

Grace gone,
she flounders.
Brown-and-white wings

flailing unsleeked—
a terrible bundle
fighting to free herself.

Look: she shakes off
the clutch of the lake, rises
into daybreak.

I will walk back to our home,
rouse you from sleep.
Ask for pardon.


Katrina Hays' writing recently appeared or is forthcoming in Apalachee Review, Bellingham Review, Crab Creek Review, The Hollins Critic, Hubbub, and Tahoma Literary Review, among others. She lives in Bend, Oregon. See katrinahays.com.

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