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   from the issue of November 3, 2005

     
 
American Life in Poetry

 BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE

All of us have known tyrants, perhaps at the office, on the playground or, as in this poem, within a family. Here Long Island poet Gloria g. Murray portrays an authoritarian mother and her domain. Perhaps you've felt the tension in a scene like this.


In My Mother's House

Every wall

stood at attention

even the air knew

when to hold its breath

the polished floors

looked up

defying heel marks

the plastic slipcovers

crinkled in discomfort



In my mother's house

the window shades

flapped

against the glare

of the world

the laughter

crawled like roaches

back into the cracks



Even the humans sat -

cardboard cut-outs

around the formica

kitchen table

and with silver knives

sliced and swallowed

their words.



Reprinted from "Poet Lore," Vol 99, No. 1/2 by permission of the author. Copyright (c) 2005 by Gloria g. Murray, whose latest book of poetry is "Five A.M. Anxiety." This weekly column is supported by The Poetry Foundation, The Library of Congress, and the UNL Department of English. This column does not accept unsolicited poetry.


GO TO: ISSUE OF NOVEMBER 3

ARTS HEADLINES FOR NOVEMBER 3

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American Life in Poetry
Arlo Guthrie returns for 'Restaurant Massacre' tour
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