Monday, April 21, 2014
In Amber
There is no history of arrival,
no landing papers, no first memories
of the ocean’s clamor, a breeze’s
finger on the spine of afternoon,
the appearance of a flower escaping soil —
after so very much entropic sea.
There is a photo of a mother and child,
the child’s eyes downcast, arms
seemingly supporting a too frail torso,
the mother thin-lipped, wary,
more feral than trusting after war,
clothed in her meager bests.
I think pupa, before metamorphosis,
before emergence, before the cognitive
I, acknowledged coal chutes and telephones,
Dickens and computers.
She avows that she remembers
everything — every step and she has cut
a bloody line between when her feet were
still on the gangplank and when she
first touched the Halifax ground.
Helm!
ReplyDeleteA moving poem. Best of all, you mother's features look exactly like you now!
What a terrible past, yet she looks so ready for a future for her (adorable) son.
You had a great NationalPoetryWriteMonth 2014,