Most days, I get a poem in my email inbox. Ted Kooser edits a column via American Life in Poetry, choosing a favorite--usually authored by talented lesser-known poets--and describing in a few sentences why the lines struck him. For my part, I'm sometimes romanced by what comes my way. Sometimes I'm indifferent. On my decidedly non-poetic days, I delete the poems without reading a word.
Today was a poetic day. And I like what came my way. Villanelles have a tendency to haunt me with their echoes.
My Mother's Pillow
By Cecilia Woloch
My mother sleeps with the Bible open on her pillow;
she reads herself to sleep and wakens startled.
She listens for her heart: each breath is shallow.
For years her hands were quick with thread and needle.
She used to sew all night when we were little;
now she sleeps with the Bible on her pillow
and believes that Jesus understands her sorrow:
her children grown, their father frail and brittle;
she stitches in her heart, her breathing shallow.
Once she "even slept fast," rushed tomorrow,
mornings full of sunlight, sons and daughters.
Now she sleeps alone with the Bible on her pillow
and wakes alone and feels the house is hollow,
though my father in his blue room stirs and mutters;
she listens to him breathe: each breath is shallow.
I flutter down the darkened hallway, shadow
between their dreams, my mother and my father,
asleep in rooms I pass, my breathing shallow.
I leave the Bible open on her pillow.
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