What could be more interesting, or in the end, more ecstatic, than in those rare moments when you see another person look at something you’ve made, and realize that they got it exactly, that your heart jumped to their heart with nothing in between.
~Robert Motherwell
For Poetry Friday, a poem that will stay with me.
Heart
by Maggie Smith
A child of, say, six knows you’re not the shape
she’s learned to make by drawing half along a fold,
cutting, then opening. Where do you open?
Where do you carry your dead? There’s no locket
for that—hinged, hanging on a chain that greens
your throat. And the dead inside you, don’t you
hear them breathing? You must have a hole
they can press their gray lips to. If you open—
read the rest here
***********
Buffy Silverman has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Buffy!
Oh, my...yes, I can see how this poem will stay with you, stay with me too. The whole poem opens with the wow of what's inside and is revealed by the end. Excellent choice for PF today. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteShe asks, then answers for us, Tabatha, & it's what is true for every goodbye. Thanks for this loving poem.
ReplyDeleteI sure do hear them breathing. I love what this poem brings up for me. Thank you! xo
ReplyDeleteWow. What a great poem.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful poem. You always find the good ones, T. Thanks for sharing. xo
ReplyDeleteIs Elena's photo of a redbud tree? Gorgeous leaves, gorgeous poem. And this captured a six-year old perspective so well: "If you open—
ReplyDeletewhen you open—will we find them folded inside?"
Wow! This is a very wonderful poem. It is so deep and thoughtful. Thank you for sharing it.
ReplyDeleteTabatha--what a mesmerizing poem. Thank you for sharing it. Opening our hearts--the task of our lifetimes.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing Maggie Smith's ♥️-wrenching and introspective poem Tabatha. I think only the heart is made
ReplyDeletewhole by opening."
Love the ancestral layers-our dead in this too. I carried some of them with me yesterday when I had dental surgery, and they helped, but alas the pain still lingers…
please thank Elena for her her gorgeous glimmer-filled heart images!
I've been missing Mom more than usual in the past week or two. This poem helps. And hurts. I'm with you; it will stay with me.
ReplyDeleteOof...this is a powerful poem. Thanks for always making me think, Tabatha. :)
ReplyDeleteAh yes, that last line will remain with me. Thank you, Tabatha!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing, Tabatha. The title of your post got me thinking, and then the poem clarified. Such a beautiful thought--only the heart "made
ReplyDeletewhole by opening." Yes!