medes879
medes879
Oct 01, 2019

One Of Those Holidays

Home for the holiday from New Orleans,
with Mother and Father at the tiny
drop leaf, brown rosewood, mahogany
table with the gold, grinning claw feet;
Father, choler- red-in the-face, short-
sleeved white shirt and cane, says the blessing
as Mother brings in the turkey and cranberry.
Then Mother asks, “Won’t you have more?” and father :
“Do you think Moll Flanders was a whore?”

(I have suffered and bleached my hair blond.)
I am silent before their replies.
Mother sighs. “I can scarce speak to her.”
And Father, too, quotes Shakespeare. (I am thin
as paper and the rose- colored bowl
of blown glass sitting on the silver stand,
half- filled with water.)

“How sharper than a serpent’s tooth it is
to have a thankless daughter”

About This Poem

Review Request Intensity: I want the raw truth, feel free to knock me on my back

Editing Stage: Editing - rough draft

About the Author

Region, Country: Wolcott, ct, USA

Favorite Poets: Major Jackson

More from this author

Comments

S

This is a complex piece,
It needs a few more words and a balance throughout.
It lost me somewhere in the Rose- coloured bowl .
Sorry I will wait to see if you are going to edit,
Yours Ian