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First Place, Poetry, NMW Awards XI |
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Elizabeth HaukaasThe Hummingbird HeartCopyright 2001 by Elizabeth Haukaas |
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a hard-boiled egg in full view of his camp-mates, writes twenty years later of the line between humanity and survival that allows a man to remain a man. Twenty years old, she curls on her bed moist and embryonic, egg-bald now, a half-faced girl. Heart beating like a hummingbird's, she never heard of Bell's Palsy. Heard of leukemia. Never knew indignities, knows this indignity. The watertight egg is what prolongs us- our humanity sealed moist inside the amnion with our hair and brains and thumbs and let's not forget our diseases- and the same sac saving us saves the wren, the crow, the hummingbird. Picture this: a picture inside a picture: a girl-baby curled inside her amnion, her girl-baby eggs safe inside their own tiny jewel cases like a set of Russian stacking dolls. The Russian of Auschwitz, friendly with the guards, guzzles his hard-boiled egg yellowing his beard as if with pollen, lives another fifty years to write of the larger guilt of surviving. A friend, whose daughter's skin is thin as albumen, whose child vomits yellow even food bland as a hard-boiled egg, whose survival is all that matters to him at fifty, who understands Primo Levi at the stairwell now, understands that the line between what happens to one man and another is fragile, eggshell. Note: Primo Levi, the Italian writer and Holocaust survivor, died after throwing himself down a stairwell in 1987. |
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