MA - I am not too thrilled with this poem. It reminds me of Dickenson-type 'girly' themes and I just have trouble getting interested. (OK bring it on all you Dickenson fans) I have 3 sons, I was raised as 1 of 3 boys, and the poem reminds of the teenage girls that come and go through the house with my sons. For the most part they all seem fairly unengaged yet consumately self absorbed and I think that's what this poem reflects. If that was the authors intent then it's perfect. Having admitted to being terminally patriarchal by nature and upbringing, and by way of maybe redeeming myself to the women here in the Fray, I offer something I wrote for my mother who even though she was the only 'girl' in the house did have a most lasting influence on me.
(sorry for the large font - I copied and pasted and don't know how to correct it here)
Letters to my Mother
I. I remember when we sat in church,
always in the first pew, heat from
the fire and brimstone of Pastor Senior’s
sermon on our face’s – in our eye’s.
And you singing the hymns.
So loud, I thought
with childish embarrassment,
yet for you as easy
as closing your eye’s in prayer.
II. I always thought it was so cool
when Gran’pa and his friends would
get together, sing barbershop songs
and drink beer. I could feel how
thrilled you’d be when
they let you join in.
It would be many years before
I realized the importance of
that harmony in my life -
and many more before I knew why.
III. I don’t understand people who
can’t be moved to tears by
the sublime sound of human voices
singing in harmony.
They are not to be trusted.
Of all the constructs of man
and the wonders of nature
nothing completes my being
like voices raised in harmony.
Once a part of you, it cannot be removed.
I could just as soon live without air.
IV. This is your gift to me.
It can’t be held or possessed.
It must be passed along
with delight and humility,
surrendered before all wonder.
©Bruce S. Niederer
11/04