Elizabeth Bradfield: Chine


From old French, eschine, a blend of Latin’s ‘spina’ (spine) and a Germanic word meaning ‘narrow piece’; Nautical: angle where the bottom of the boat meets the side.

She has a hard chine
who said it?  A hard chine. A strong
spine. Say it nodding, wise—

pitch lowered by bruised
memory.  Mac, you wanted no chine
on the Bowdoin.  A curved hull

to follow the globe’s curve
north, to slide up easy onto ice
when it gripped. Can we slide

so easy?  Can we? I like it
when the edge of things
is clear.  Like to know when

I’m deadrise, when freeboard. 
If a boat tips easily, we say
she’s tender. Responsive and quick-

turning at weight-shift yet also
quicker to capsize.  In heavy seas,
a hard chine has an edge to push

against, a way to recover.


Read More