a poem for poet laureate Rita Dove |
for Rita Dove Ms. Rita Dove would not have loved my mama's kitchen, all pink-and-white-tiled in sterile cold precision, like a 1950's doctors office. Not a live green thing there, and nothing dead, but the silence of lost dreams. You could not write smooth American poems there rolling to the limits of the page. Our Philco never held fresh-cut flowers, only sprinkled laundry wrapped in striped cottton towels waiting the hiss of the heavy Sunbeam. But in a yellow house at the corner, by charm or circumstance we both read Langston Hughes, danced to Soul Train, and learned to love the breath in an iambic bass line, and words that gleam and slither with grace and punch. Ms. Rita would have hated my mama's kitchen. Still, we're part of the same family tree. Author's Note:The prompts inspired the poem and a poetry writing exercise by Poet Laureate Rita Dove who suggested writing about your mother's kitchen, and to put in something green and something dead. Written for:
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