Close Menu
  • Home
    • About
    • Masthead
    • Links
  • MER Journal
    • Latest Issue
    • Back Issues
    • Subscribe to MER!
  • MER ONLINE
    • MER Quarterly
    • MER Literary Folios
    • Poetry
    • Fiction
    • Creative Prose
    • Essay
    • Craft
    • Interviews
    • Book Reviews
      • Bookshelf
    • Authors’ Notes
    • Art Gallery
      • Special – Hybrids
  • News & Events
    • News
    • Poem of the Month
    • Events
      • MER 18 Virtual Reading – Voices From HOME
    • Currents
      • Announcements
      • Highlights
  • Shop
    • All Issues
    • One Year Subscription
    • Two Year Subscription
  • Submit
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
MER – Mom Egg Review
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube Tumblr Threads
  • Home
    • About
    • Masthead
    • Links
  • MER Journal
    • Latest Issue
    • Back Issues
    • Subscribe to MER!
  • MER ONLINE
    • MER Quarterly
    • MER Literary Folios
    • Poetry
    • Fiction
    • Creative Prose
    • Essay
    • Craft
    • Interviews
    • Book Reviews
      • Bookshelf
    • Authors’ Notes
    • Art Gallery
      • Special – Hybrids
  • News & Events
    • News
    • Poem of the Month
    • Events
      • MER 18 Virtual Reading – Voices From HOME
    • Currents
      • Announcements
      • Highlights
  • Shop
    • All Issues
    • One Year Subscription
    • Two Year Subscription
  • Submit
NEWSLETTER
MER – Mom Egg Review
You are at:Home » Changing States by Margaret Houston

Changing States by Margaret Houston

0
By Mom Egg Review on May 7, 2012 Poetry

Life begins in water.
Here, on the gravel beach,
where the shifting tides rock clattering pebbles
forward and back in their arms,
and the murmuring sea whispers lullabies in our ears,
I watched you.

You were silver and grey like the sea. Stooped over.
One hand curving sideways, shucking
smooth skittering pebbles out to sea.

The cliff’s arms encircled us.
We ambled together, embraced,
then pulled apart. Solid to liquid.
I walked with my head bent downwards,
scanning the gravelled earth
for a mottled rock shot with rust,
or a limpet shell, curved like a pregnant belly
and all the colours of sand.
Or smooth luminous sea glass, not quite clear,
its edges dulled by the tossing ocean.

All life begins in water.

Rocking towards the moon they lie,
nestled in the deep,
webbed feet and sealed eyelids
somersaulting water ballets in my womb,
unknown characters
to walk this beach with us,
back and forth,
drawn together and apart
like the tides.

 


Margaret HoustonMargaret Pritchard Houston is an American expat living in London. Her work has been published in many journals, including Prime Number, Fourth River, and Interrobang, and her play “Alexander” received 4-star reviews at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. She is a youth worker in the Church of England, where she writes regularly on children’s spirituality, and has a book coming out in 2013.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleWhere Babies Come From and Go by Rasma Haidri
Next Article Museum of Motherhood M.O.M. Conference
Leave A Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

October 14, 2025

Author’s Note: Marjorie Maddox on Seeing Things

October 14, 2025

Lydia Kann’s Graphic Novel, Germaine’s Daughter

October 14, 2025

In The Needle, A Woman by Susan Michele Coronel

October 14, 2025

My Mother in Havana: A Memoir of Magic & Miracle by Rebe Huntman

October 14, 2025

MER Bookshelf – October, 2025

September 28, 2025

In Loving Memory of Jennifer Martelli

September 25, 2025

MER Poem of the Month – October 2025

September 25, 2025

MER Announces Nominations for Best of the Net 2026

September 18, 2025

Interview: Jennifer Jean and Mojdeh Bahar on New Books of Poetry in Translation

September 17, 2025

MER Bookshelf – September 2025

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube Tumblr Threads
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Submit
  • Contact
MER - Mom Egg Review
PO Box 9037, Bardonia, NY 10954
Contact [email protected]

Copyright © 2025 MER and Mom Egg Review

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.