Mother and Father in Death

     Mother and Father in Death

Modern poetry  modern verse contemporary poetry  contemporary verse  modern poem  contemporary poem

He dreamed about his mother—then reached out

To touch her, but his hands came up against

A marble wall of blackness.  In a pout

She lingered in her death, her love condensed

In all the darker harms she did to him.

Her silent song behind that barrier

Became a solemn blue, a cut-gem hymn

Of compromise.  She was a carrier

Of such infections as a mother gives

When she has HIV, although of course

She thought of it as love.  The womb scar lives

In him in daylight, having labor’s force.

..His father?  Well, his father doesn’t glow.

….His father beckons him in granite snow.

Phillip Whidden