My sons, 2003 |
The History of Mothers and Sons
All sons sleep next to mothers, then alone, then with others
Eventually, all our sons bare molars, incisors
Meanwhile, mothers are wingless things in a room of stairs
A gymnasium of bars and ropes, small arms hauling self over self
Mothers hum nonsense, driving here
and there (Here! There!) in hollow steeds, mothers reflecting
how faint reflections shiver over the road
All the deafening musts along the way
Mothers favor the moon—hook-hung and mirroring the sun—
there, in a berry bramble, calm as a stone
This is enough to wrench our hand out of his
and simply devour him, though he exceeds even the tallest grass
Every mother recalls a lullaby, and the elegy blowing through it
Lisa Furmanski
You can listen to it here.
And grandmothers too, it would seem.
ReplyDeleteGorgeous poem.
Chills.
ReplyDeleteStunning words here, a mother's love.
ReplyDeletewell, yes.
ReplyDeleteI remember this poem clearly from the first time you posted it. it has stayed with me since.
ReplyDeleteThat picture is beyond adorable. It doesn't get much cuter than that. I bet it is one of your favourite pictures of your boys. :-)
ReplyDeleteWhoa. Yes.
ReplyDeleteLove the poem and your boys.
ReplyDeleteBest,
Bonnie
"Every mother recalls a lullaby, and the elegy blowing through it"
ReplyDelete