Never has a greater wretch walked on this here land Her wrists are bound in iron In torn and stained attire
Never has a sadder ghost drifted on this sand Her sallow skin translucent Atoning for cruel abuses
Never was a sicker girl seen on an empty path Blood flows with every sneeze Her lungs rattle with a wheeze
Never has a woman been dealt with so much wrath Rocks bruise her skinny legs and arms Wicked people visit her with harm
She walks in quiet misery She drifts from place to place She never stays in one town long Or shows her tear-streaked face
She walks in utter silence She never whispers a single word She never notices those around Their devilish faces all a blur
She walks in quiet misery From civilization to the wild She will always be in misery Remorse at losing her only child
A long time ago I was sitting at the dinner table with my friends and their grandmother. She was in town visiting from Ohio. After some drinking and merriment, she told stories about growing up in the bible belt in the '50s. She told us how she had gotten pregnant at the age of 15, out of wedlock, and lost the child 4 months later. Her family disowned her and her town turned her out. It was such a heartbreaking story that I wanted to try and express her sorrow through poetry. For years she truly thought it was her fault and it wasn't until she became a nurse in the '70s that she learned she had a genetic disorder increasing her chances of miscarriage by astronomical levels. My heart really goes out to her harrowing experience. This is for you Mirriam.