She is mixing the ladies’ fingers Chopped and fried With sautéed, spiced onions And I watch As she dips the pan Toward herself And all the oil runs over Like a lost child At the sight of his sister In a crowd
With the other hand She pushes those vegetables Into the awaiting *** Places the pan aside And grabs hold of the *** Twisting her wrists Working up the magic
She flips the greens Over the crescent onions Mingling them up And in front of my eyes She has cooked up a dish
Then she spins the wheat dough In between her fingers Nimble as a dove’s beak Tossing it from palm to palm and All of a sudden It is a flattened sun
She turns it around on the griddle Before exposing it to the flames It rises, rises, then falls A breathing thing And Goodness be ****** She doesn’t even burn it Not a single mark She cooked the sun over blue fires Turned it into a moon
I wonder how she does it My mother Master an art she doesn’t even like While I— I fiddle around With my pens and brushes The smug blankness
Of neglected canvases And unfilled pages Mocking me of a fairy-light child I could not become—