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.

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It's #tbt! Enjoy this great one from SWWIM Every Day's archives!


A teacher of mine once said every writer
has only four or five subjects.

There’s happiness in repetition
if you don’t hear the seconds ticking.

What’s worse? Dedicating yourself
to failure or denying it again and again?

Pacher’s pupil, a Renaissance carver, perfected
the pine folds of Saint Margaret’s robes

using a large axe, then
several smaller ones, then

sanded and painted her in fine detail.
Did he ever think where did the time go?

She stands at the back of a church in Tyrol,
a dragon writhing under her feet.

What do you live for? The quiet
before sunrise or the moments after.

The baby coos in her pram.
I’ve always wanted to use the word pram

at least once in a poem.
Now that I’m a mother,

I’ve a better understanding of terror
and the miraculous.

Who will she be when she’s grown?
Do I have time to shower?

If, as a famous writer decreed, it takes 10,000 hours
to achieve mastery,

I’ve perfected rocking my hips from side-to-side,
changing a diaper in dim dawn light.

My baby practices sitting up even in her sleep—
her head bobs like a buoy, her eyelids shudder.

My teacher said sometimes your first line
is your last line.

What’s more? The moment she walks
or the moment she falls down.

Looking again at the photo, the dragon
lies curled at Margaret’s feet.

I’m holding an image of an image
someone else carved in my hands.

She loves it when I sprinkle my fingers
down on her like rain.

I’m holding the rain in my hands
and in my hands, the rain holds her.



Sara Burnett is the author of Seed Celestial (2022), winner of the Autumn House Press Poetry Prize. She has been published in Barrow Street, Copper Nickel, PANK, RHINO, and elsewhere. She holds an MFA from the University of Maryland, and a MA in English Literature from the University of Vermont, and is the recipient of scholarships from the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference. In addition to writing poetry and essays, she also writes picture books. She lives in Maryland with her family. See sararburnett.com.

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