Intersection With Unborn Child
#1
Intersection With Unborn Child

What is time
to you now,
little soul? Are you behind

the bright unblinking eye
of this fat crow
nursing a heel of bread

I watch so long
I lose track of myself, missing
the small red hand

that means it’s safe
to cross? Good people
come over to watch me

watch the windows
all night long, blow kisses
to the wind. With love

they warn me
not to waste my life
looking for signs, you

who I can always find
between my ribs
and the stars.
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#2
I must say I haven’t read such consistently high quality poetry on this site since Mercedes Webb Pullman used to write. Barring the odd poem from TqB or Todd.
There isn’t much to critique. It’s perfect

(07-11-2026, 02:23 AM)matsunosuperfan Wrote:  Intersection With Unborn Child

What is time
to you now,
little soul? Are you behind

the bright unblinking eye …. Touché 
of this fat crow
nursing a heel of bread … nice word choice 

I watch so long
I lose track of myself, missing
the small red hand … touche again. Here it would be the green man, but the little hand is perfect foreshadowing 

that means it’s safe
to cross? Good people
come over to watch me

watch the windows
all night long, blow kisses
to the wind. With love

they warn me
not to waste my life
looking for signs, you … the reveal 

who I can always find
between my ribs
and the stars. … perfection 
Reply
#3
(07-11-2026, 11:16 AM)busker Wrote:  I must say I haven’t read such consistently high quality poetry on this site since Mercedes Webb Pullman used to write. Barring the odd poem from TqB or Todd.
There isn’t much to critique. It’s perfect

(07-11-2026, 02:23 AM)matsunosuperfan Wrote:  Intersection With Unborn Child

What is time
to you now,
little soul? Are you behind

the bright unblinking eye …. Touché 
of this fat crow
nursing a heel of bread … nice word choice 

I watch so long
I lose track of myself, missing
the small red hand … touche again. Here it would be the green man, but the little hand is perfect foreshadowing 

that means it’s safe
to cross? Good people
come over to watch me

watch the windows
all night long, blow kisses
to the wind. With love

they warn me
not to waste my life
looking for signs, you … the reveal 

who I can always find
between my ribs
and the stars. … perfection 

Wow I'm honored and flattered, thank you kindly. Doing my best not to totally spam the forum ://
This was written for a very beloved one who called me in sadness yesterday, so I'm glad it's doing something.
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#4
(07-11-2026, 04:10 PM)matsunosuperfan Wrote:  
(07-11-2026, 11:16 AM)busker Wrote:  I must say I haven’t read such consistently high quality poetry on this site since Mercedes Webb Pullman used to write. Barring the odd poem from TqB or Todd.
There isn’t much to critique. It’s perfect

(07-11-2026, 02:23 AM)matsunosuperfan Wrote:  Intersection With Unborn Child

What is time
to you now,
little soul? Are you behind

the bright unblinking eye …. Touché 
of this fat crow
nursing a heel of bread … nice word choice 

I watch so long
I lose track of myself, missing
the small red hand … touche again. Here it would be the green man, but the little hand is perfect foreshadowing 

that means it’s safe
to cross? Good people
come over to watch me

watch the windows
all night long, blow kisses
to the wind. With love

they warn me
not to waste my life
looking for signs, you … the reveal 

who I can always find
between my ribs
and the stars. … perfection 

Wow I'm honored and flattered, thank you kindly. Doing my best not to totally spam the forum ://
This was written for a very beloved one who called me in sadness yesterday, so I'm glad it's doing something.

If you’ve whipped out this poem in a day and found such perfect pacing and word choice, then that’s doubly impressive

This is Claude, which I prompted to “find flaws”
I think it’s nonsense



The ending states its own theme. “Not to waste my life / looking for signs” tells us directly what the poem has been dramatizing indirectly through the crow and the crosswalk. Then the last three lines re-affirm the opposite (I will keep finding you in signs) — which is a nice reversal, but because the poem names the tension explicitly right before enacting it, the ending feels slightly over-explained. You might trust the images to carry that argument without the “warn me not to waste my life” line spelling it out.

Stanza 4’s syntax is doing a lot of gymnastics. “Good people / come over to watch me // watch the windows” — the double “watch” is clever but the sentence has to work hard to get there, and on first read it’s genuinely ambiguous whether the good people are watching her or watching the windows with her. Might be worth a beat of clarity here, even if you want to keep some disorientation elsewhere.

Title is a bit flat compared to the poem’s texture. “Intersection With Unborn Child” front-loads the crosswalk metaphor and telegraphs the ending before the poem gets to earn it.

None of these are fatal — the poem’s strongest quality (that collapse of the domestic and cosmic, the refusal to be reassured) survives all of them. But if you’re revising, the crow and the ending are where I’d spend the most time.
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#5
Hello - a couple in-line suggestions:

Intersection With Unborn Child

What is time
to you now,
little soul? Are you behind

the bright unblinking eye
of this fat crow perhaps 'that lone crow' ?
nursing a heel of bread perhaps 'pecking' - babies may nurse, but crows peck. Period after 'bread'

I watch so long
I lose track of myself, missing
the small red hand I'm not quite getting the 'red' of the hand. This S. seems to lead awkwardly into the next S. Not sure how to solve it without messing with the tercet form

that means it’s safe
to cross? Good people I see how the ? ends the question, but it feels out of place (solved by that period after 'bread')
come over to watch me

watch the windows interesting repetition of 'watch"
all night long, blow kisses
to the wind. With love

they warn me
not to waste my life
looking for signs, you his lead-in to the next line diffuses some of the power of the final S.

who I can always find maybe 'yet' instead of 'who'?
between my ribs
and the stars. way cool last S.

I get from the title that you almost miss the DON'T WALK sign at an intersection, yet the change of setting from there to looking out the window needs to be clearer. That, or leave the intersection out, and re-work the middle section. Just suggestions, for an otherwise strong poem...
... Mark
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#6
(07-13-2026, 04:09 AM)Mark A Becker Wrote:  Hello - a couple in-line suggestions:

Intersection With Unborn Child

What is time
to you now,
little soul? Are you behind

the bright unblinking eye
of this fat crow  perhaps 'that lone crow'  ?
nursing a heel of bread perhaps 'pecking' - babies may nurse, but crows peck.  Period after 'bread'

I watch so long
I lose track of myself, missing
the small red hand  I'm not quite getting the 'red' of the hand. This S. seems to lead awkwardly into the next S. Not sure how to solve it without messing with the tercet form

that means it’s safe
to cross? Good people  I see how the ? ends the question, but it feels out of place (solved by that period after 'bread')
come over to watch me

watch the windows  interesting repetition of 'watch"
all night long, blow kisses
to the wind. With love

they warn me
not to waste my life
looking for signs, you his lead-in to the next line diffuses some of the power of the final S.

who I can always find maybe 'yet' instead of 'who'?
between my ribs
and the stars.  way cool last S.

I get from the title that you almost miss the DON'T WALK sign at an intersection, yet the change of setting from there to looking out the window needs to be clearer.  That, or leave the intersection out, and re-work the middle section. Just suggestions, for an otherwise strong poem...
... Mark

Thank you for the thoughtful and detailed notes Mark, I appreciate the reading <3
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