
My Mother’s Coat Easter
The salmon coat not just
a fish out of water but a stucco of the sun
the son;
I know that my redeemer liveth steepling like
the church roof, our fingers treed
in short gloves white
as sycamores;
salmon only pink in the way that a marigold
is not yellow, a kiss
lipsticked.
And, though my mother now heard how
we would stand fleshed
at the end, and where is thy sting
death,
she could not not-believe in that sharp sting, having
felt it–
so that even as the stone rolled away
and her coat leapt high
into the day,
tears steepled–
it was not a morning you could not mourn in
until, child of her flesh,
I took her by our short gloves
to swim the concrete, to roll us through
the clouds and stone, the hyacinthed
coffee,
jollying her
as if a smooth-keeled boat–
floating till blue too
would pass away, some summer night,
when bared-armed
and fireflied,
something free
would come alive,
warm darknesses
electrified,
our feet jumping
over waves of purpled grass
as if driven by pure
instinct.
I write of this
now older than my mother
as if it were only she then
who felt
such sorrow.
***********************
A revision of a draft poem posted last year for a prompt by Izy Gruye on Real Toads, that I revised thinking of Easter and the current real toads prompt (from Shay) about a crack, a fissure. The picture is in fact of a coat of my mother’s.


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