She is the author of four books: The Love that Ended Yesterday in Texas (inaugural winner of the Texas Tech University Press First Book Competition, 1992); Traveling in Time of Danger (Iris Press, 1999), A Book of Minutes (Iris Press, 2004), andThe Candle I Hold Up to See You (Iris Press, 2009).
A SOUTHERN RHETORIC
"It's a sight in this world
the things in this world
there are to see!" my mother says
as she hurries between the stove
and Sunday table. She is just back
from vacation. Happy.
Talking mountains. Talking rivers.
Big cedars and tidal bores.
When I tease her for redundancy,
her face glows like a sturgeon moon
risen above fat buttery atolls
of biscuits, steaming promontory
of roast. She shakes her finger
in my face and scolds me good:
"Girl, don't you forget who it was
learned you to talk."
Amazing she would want
to lay claim to these syllables
piling up like railroad salvage
when I speak, to these words slow as hooves
dredging from the wet of just-plowed fields.
I watch her turn, embarrassed, to the sink,
to the pots and pans she will scrub
to a gleam so bright we can see ourselves
as if the two of us stared back
from the lost rhetoric of memory.
From the little house, the crib where
she bent each day, naming
for me the world where words always fail,
warranting, now and then,
those few extra syllables,
some things spoken twice.
First appeared in Poetry, later in Cathy's first book, The Love That Ended Yesterday in Texas.
8 comments:
Today was a pleasure. We loved having the two of you with us at CCCTI.
This is a beautiful poem. It makes me miss my Mama.
What a beautiful poem. Cathy Smith Bowers' mom sounds a lot like mine. "Gettin a little uppity ain't you?" she'll say. Thanks for sharing this one. It makes me smile and want to see mama.
Nancy, the time spent at CCCTI was wonderful. I so appreciate the invitation to read with Cathy. It was fun, something I can't always say about a poetry reading!
Nancy, I still remember your poem Sharing the Bed with Mother. One of my favorites. I'm so pleased to read and hear of the reviews coming your way for Living Above the Frost Line. This important work and it will be celebrated and remembered.
Judy, I'm glad you like this poem! I do, too. Sounds just like home, doesn't it? Thank you for dropping by.I think you'll like the other poems I have on tap for April. So check back for the remaining days of April.
That's so beautiful. My older friends often said "Hit's a sight on earth ..."
I was fortunate enough to be one of Cathy's students at Queens. She has such an amazing gift of writing that is completely awe inspiring. She is not only an amazing poet, but an incredible woman and friend!
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