A Mother


Next year, we promised ourselves,
we'd have to get it for her next year,
that sculpture in cork and ivory:
framed in a world of glass,
a house smaller than her thumbnail
and trees and reeds
and a bridge to an island
where miniature cranes spread their wings
for flight.

When she saw it first, a month ago,
at that shop in Ayala,
she held it up to the light
with both hands.
She was so afraid it would slip!

Her dreams were larger
than our twelve-year-old pockets.
Instead, papa helped us wrap up
a china cat we'd found
in a sea front store.
We hid it under the towels
in the closet.

That afternoon we put on records
and papa did impressions
with a made up guitar.
Then there was that smoky, rich, funny
smell coming from the oven...
We looked at each other, then raced
to the kitchen in twos.
She laughed, and he laughed too,
as she scraped
the burnt-out bottom of his coffee cake
from the pan.
We didn't.

After dinner we gathered around her,
our hearts beating
like so many small wings.
First the white ribbon, then the box,
then the layered tissues.
"Oh!" she said. "Oh!"
and she held it to her cheek.

There, between the lamplight
and the window, rocked in his arms,
she held it to her cheek.


19 comments:

  1. I enjoy how much of your work is about things other than romantic love.

    This evokes memories of my own, and you write with a lyric grace I enjoy.

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  2. I am totally drawn in and removed from myself reading your work about family. This is just exquisite. The adoration here is tangible to the heart.

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  3. This poem was first published in the League of Canadian Poets' annual collection Vintage a while back. Maria Jacobs, who was a judge of the associated competition, provided very kind comments on the poem.

    Someone else liked the poem enough to select it as a poem for analysis in the Canadian Provincial Exams for English in British Columbia. Students were supposed to answer mutliple-choice questions on this poem and write an essay.

    The exam is here: http://kitsilano.vsb.bc.ca/Students/provincials/2000/00-06-English.pdf

    You may want to try your hand at the questions, I know I did. I wonder what marks I would have gotten?

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  4. Short link - http://bit.ly/s4amother

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  5. nicely played sam...wonderful story telling ability...as is evident by the accolades it has received...you work with a gentle pen drawing us in...

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  6. Gorgeous, wonderful, sublime - oops I am gushing and I hardly ever gush :)

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  7. A heartwarming, narrative poem... Wonderful juxtaposition of a younger generation taking great care to keep their gift a secret for such a memorable moment. Stylistically, the repetition at the end is very well-placed and meaningful—your final two stanzas are connected literally cheek-to-cheek.

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  8. oh my, you so beautifully capture the fearsome moment of child adoring mother, wondering if what he can give to her is good enough-- I so love these lines:

    After dinner we gathered around her,
    our hearts beating
    like so many small wings.
    First the white ribbon, then the box,
    then the layered tissues.
    "Oh!" she said. "Oh!"
    and she held it to her cheek."

    and the emphatic repetition that follows. So tender! xxxj

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  9. Just a beautiful, evocative poem --- eliciting tears here.

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  10. Lovely evocation of children loving their mother, and the mother's deep appreciation of anything and everything her children present to her.'Oh', repeated is just perfect, and holding the small bird to her cheek is so touching. Love it.

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  11. So lovely , nice reading you again.

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  12. ah, that sweet-biting feeling

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  13. This is so evocative... and so universal...

    Here is my one shot:
    diamonte

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  14. I felt the love and joy in this one. Beautifully told.

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  15. Poignant piece without any trace of saccharine. What a mother's day card! Beautiful work as always, Sam.

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  16. A memory captured in your heart in in a poem. I know the treasure chest of memories is packed Samuel and each one you recall is timeless


    Appreciate you!!!

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  17. A living memory simple but with emotional power

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  18. Samuel, what can I say? Everything they said. lol

    This transports me to a simpler time. When my world was just so. :')

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  19. back to read again and egg you on. love your work, Sam. xxxj

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For you I wish that these poems were rubies, borne by my own caravan from Xi'an out of Shaanxi, through Persia, along the northern Silk Road.

- S. Peralta, Twelve Stones on a Necklace

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