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A little longer, And time will be stronger, Drafting a world where no such road will run From you to me —Philip Larkin There I sat Alone with my pie With its perfect golden crust And its sugary dust. The metal fork I Used rang clear When it clicked against the plate Cutting smallish bites. It’s then that I Think of my mother— She taught me how to cook This pie from a second-rate book. I was six When we had to move; It was best, I was told, to leave what I knew behind And I didn’t mind. Everything was new We had a very small house Then I started again at school Oh, the kids were cruel! And there was nothing Like our loneliness I thought to my mother Too quiet to tell her I loved her. I hid in my chair She found the book “We’ll make a sour cherry pie” And pulled a glass for whiskey. We cooked for hours Cutting cherries and folding crust Neither of us was concerned When we saw the pie had burned. We didn’t care About the charred Black welts and the rock-like crust With its burnt carbon dust— My mother and I Were happy, we knew the fruit and syrup survived hot and sour, baked inside.
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Feb 2, 2010
Feb 2, 2010 at 11:49 AM UTC
Memory of a Mother
A little longer, And time will be stronger, Drafting a world where no such road will run From you to me —Philip Larkin There I sat Alone with my pie With its perfect golden crust And its sugary dust. The metal fork I Used rang clear When it clicked against the plate Cutting smallish bites. It’s then that I Think of my mother— She taught me how to cook This pie from a second-rate book. I was six When we had to move; It was best, I was told, to leave what I knew behind And I didn’t mind. Everything was new We had a very small house Then I started again at school Oh, the kids were cruel! And there was nothing Like our loneliness I thought to my mother Too quiet to tell her I loved her. I hid in my chair She found the book “We’ll make a sour cherry pie” And pulled a glass for whiskey. We cooked for hours Cutting cherries and folding crust Neither of us was concerned When we saw the pie had burned. We didn’t care About the charred Black welts and the rock-like crust With its burnt carbon dust— My mother and I Were happy, we knew the fruit and syrup survived hot and sour, baked inside.
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American
Feb 2, 2010
Feb 2, 2010 at 11:49 AM UTC
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