Home » Happy Mother’s Day! (quotes, or lack thereof)

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Happy Mother’s Day! (quotes, or lack thereof) — 2 Comments

  1. Perhaps the production of pithy quotations about parenthood, in all its complexity and ambivalence, is a job best suited to poets — or perhaps to poets who are themselves parents. The speaker’s voice in the following poem could be that of a mother or a father. Regardless of gender, the poem’s evocation of the feelings of a parent who is about to lose a beloved child to adulthood makes it a worthy companion to the lovely Jarrell poem on your blog.

    The Writer
    by Richard Wilbur

    In her room at the prow of the house
    Where the light breaks, and the windows are tossed with linden,
    My daughter is writing a story.

    I pause in the stairwell, hearing
    From her shut door a commotion of typewriter-keys
    Like a chain hauled over a gunwale.

    Young as she is, the stuff
    Of her life is a great cargo, and some of it heavy:
    I wish her a lucky passage.

    But now it is she who pauses,
    As if to reject my thought and its easy figure.
    A stillness greatens, in which

    The whole house seems to be thinking,
    And then she is at it again with a bunched clamor
    Of strokes, and again is silent.

    I remember the dazed starling
    Which was trapped in that very room, two years ago;
    How we stole in, lifted a sash

    And retreated, not to affright it;
    And how for a helpless hour, through the crack of the door, We watched the sleek, wild, dark

    And iridescent creature
    Batter against the brilliance, drop like a glove
    To the hard floor, or the desk-top,

    And wait then, humped and bloody,
    For the wits to try it again; and how our spirits
    Rose when, suddenly sure,

    It lifted off from a chair-back,
    Beating a smooth course for the right window
    And clearing the sill of the world.

    It is always a matter, my darling,
    Of life or death, as I had forgotten. I wish
    What I wished you before, but harder.

  2. A quote not for mothers, but it should have been.

    How do I feel about my mother?
    The way grass feels the sun.

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