the mOOn is a wOman by Abigail Hawk
ancient greeks believed the mOOn’s dark
places were core-deep seas,
and they named them
marias.
god fashioned eve
of adam’s rib,
but theia smashed into earth
to make the mOOn,
two bodies creating
new dust and stone.
colored bone and neroli
and, rarely, blue,
the mOOn swings her mood
as she moves through her phases,
waxing to waning,
new, quarter, half, full…
she pulls at the tide,
that black brackish blanket,
her need for cover ever based on her
menses:
the mOOn is a wOman.
there will be blood a couple
times a year
and harvest every five or so.
she’s locked in earth’s dance,
keeping time with her father;
so she maintains the days of
wolf, strawberry, snow…
as a “good” wOman would,
she sustains
life:
the mOOn is a wOman.
she has no weather;
she just remains, bravely
holding close those
garish flags, those man-in-mOOn footprints,
gamely showing her scars
to the blaze of the sun,
steady in her shifts,
always gifting us
her cratered face.
sure, her smile is
simultaneously a scythe
and her secrets lie
on the shadowed side,
but still, she lets the light
of others shine.
gravity and orbit are mystical things,
but this mystery brings us
back to the fact:
the mOOn is a wOman.
the mOOn is a wOman.