(Poem #184)Waking Elsewhere I woke up dreaming my mother's garden— fields in autumn, green turning gold, grasses scythed down in the late, dark sun; and here will be corn, she was saying, tomatoes, flowers I never knew she loved. I woke to a child climbing into my bed —four-year-old girl of my sister's son— hair like silk and the color of wheat falling into her eyes, begging me to get up. And in my mother's kitchen the strong light smelled of coffee and autumn, in fact. In fact, my mother, who hasn't gardened in twenty years, was taking a bath. I heard her splashing through the walls. It was October; the child came forward, one fresh egg cupped in her palm. I woke up dreaming the harrowed fields, sharp with stubble, my mother's lands. She was already preparing for spring; she was already stepping naked from the bath, away from grief— a widow with work to do, weeds in the yard, and the child calling softly to me, come on, come on, come on. |
0 comments: - or Leave a comment
Post a Comment