Ellen Bass has published several poetry collections: Mules of Love, a Lambda Literary Award winner; The Human Line, a San Francisco Chronicle Notable Book; Like a Beggar; and Indigo, a New York Times New and Notable Book. She coedited one of the first anthologies to highlight feminist poetry, the groundbreaking No More Masks! Her nonfiction books include the best-selling The Courage to Heal: A Guide for Women Survivors of Child Sexual Abuse, translated into ten languages. Among her many awards are three Pushcart Prizes and the Pablo Neruda Prize. A chancellor of the Academy of American Poets, Bass teaches in the MFA writing program at Pacific University.

Photograph by Irene Young.

Pale Blue Vein

by Ellen Bass

The count of the dead
in Gaza is rising. Last
night 15,000, 6,000 children.
It could be me
there with a dead baby. No one
decreed I’d be born
in a row house in Philadelphia.
No one wrote in the Book of Life
that my father would escape
the pogroms, carried
on his brother’s shoulders
through the snow from Kyiv to the sea.
There was a time
I thought the pain of the other
was not like my pain. Babies
slaughtered in Israel.
Every five minutes a child dies in Gaza.
It could be our baby.
Her eyebrow, its perfect arc,
the pale blue vein
that sweeps out
from the tip of her brow,
as though some lesser god
gave up on the rest
of the world and in her idleness just
added this extra touch
of beauty to beauty.

Read on . . .

More by Ellen Bass