Homer, Whitling Boy, 1873
The HAMMOCK
When I lay my head in my mother’s lap
I think how day
hides the stars,
the way I lay
hidden once, waiting
inside my
mother’s singing to herself. And I remember
how she carried
me on her back
between home
and the kindergarten,
once each
morning and once each afternoon.
I don’t know
what my mother’s thinking.
When my son
lays his head in my lap, I wonder:
Do his father’s
kisses keep his father’s worries
from becoming
his? I think, Dear God, and remember
there are stars
we haven’t heard from yet:
They have so
far to arrive. Amen,
I think, and I
feel almost comforted.
I’ve no idea
what my child is thinking.
Between two
unknowns, I live my life.
Between my
mother’s hopes, older than I am
by coming
before me, and my child’s wishes, older than I am
by outliving
me. And what’s it like?
Is it a door,
and good-bye on either side?
A window, and
eternity on either side?
Yes, and a
little singing between two great rests.
Li-Young Lee
Li-Young Lee
No comments:
Post a Comment