Poem-a-Day - "My Mother, My Mother" by Luther Hughes

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July 23, 2020  

My Mother, My Mother


Luther Hughes

When I was a child I would run
through the backyard while my father
yanked dandelions, daisies, thistles, crabgrass,
mowed, rearranged the stones around the porch—
the task of men, though I didn’t know.
Blushed with cartoons and chocolate milk
one Saturday, I found a bee working
a dandelion for its treasure the way
only God’s creatures can, giving
and giving until all that is left
is the act itself—and there’s faith, too,
my mother used to say in her magnolia lilt.
It comes as it comes—there’s a road to follow.
When I swat the bee, I plea in triumph.
My father, knee-drenched in manhood,
grins and his gold tooth glistens a likely tale.
And when the bee stings my ear,
I run to him screaming as my mother
runs outside hearing her only child’s voice
peel back the wallpaper. She charms my ear
with kisses. This afternoon, I notice a bee
trapped inside the window as my mother
on the phone tries to still her voice
to say her mother has died. I wonder if he can
taste the sadness, the man on TV tells the other.
The bee is so calm. The room enlists
a fresh haunting, and the doorframe bothers.
To believe her when she says—
as the bouquet of yellow roses on the dresser
bows its head and the angles of my clay bloom
with fire—it’ll be okay, is my duty as son.
My mother sits in the hospital in San Antonio,
motherless—my mother is now a mother
without the longest love she’s ever known.
My mother who used to wake up
before the slap of sunrise with my father
to build new rooftops. My mother who wrote
“I pray you have a great day”
on stupid notes tucked in my lunchbox.
My mother who told the white woman 
in Ross to apologize for bumping into me
as I knocked over a rack of pantyhose.
My mother who cried in Sea-Tac airport
as I walked through customs, yes-ing
the woman who asks, Is it his first time
moving from home? My mother who looks
at me with glinted simper when the pastor spouts
“disobedient children.” My mother who was told
at a young age she’d never give birth,
barren as she were. My mother, my mother.
What rises inside me, I imagine inside her, although
I’ve never had a mother leave this earth.
I’ve never been without love.

Copyright © 2020 by Luther Hughes. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on July 23, 2020, by the Academy of American Poets.

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“I was reading a lot of poetry about mothers and motherhood, specifically poems by Sharon Olds, Ada Limón, and Camille T. Dungy, when this poem came to me. I have a complicated relationship with my mother, who is still alive, and I am grateful for that. My mother was close to her mother, who died several years ago. And though my mother and I don’t always see eye to eye and although she can annoy me to death, I truly do love her. I can’t imagine my life without her.”
Luther Hughes

Luther Hughes received his MFA from Washington University in St. Louis. He is the author of Touched (Sibling Rivalry Press, 2018). The recipient of the 2020 92Y Discovery Poetry Contest, Hughes is the founder of Shade Literary Arts, the executive editor for The Offing, and a cohost of The Poet Salon podcast alongside Gabrielle Bates and Dujie Tahat.

Touched
(Sibling Rivalry Press, 2018)

Black Lives Matter Anthology

“You protecting the river   You are who I love
delivering babies, nursing the sick”

—“You Are Who I Love” by Aracelis Girmay


“The Average Mother” by Camille T. Dungy
read more
“My Mother Was No White Dove” by Reginald Shepherd
read more

Thanks to Mahogany L. Browne, author of Woke: A Young Poet’s Call to Justice (Roaring Brook Press, 2020), who curated Poem-a-Day for July 20-July 31. Read a Q&A about Browne’s curatorial approach and find out more about our guest editors for the year
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