Saturday Poem

For My Sister Molly
Who In The Fifties

Once made a fairy rooster from
Mashed potatoes
Whose eyes I forget
But green onions were his tail
And his two legs were carrot sticks
A tomato slice his crown.
Who came home on vacation
When the sun was hot
and cooked
and cleaned
And minded least of all
The children’s questions
A million or more
Pouring in on her
Who had been to school
And knew (and told us too) that certain
Words were no longer good
And taught me not to say us for we
No matter what “Sonny said” up the
road.

For My Sister Molly Who In The Fifties

Knew Hamlet well and read into the night
And coached me in my songs of Africa
A continent I never knew
But learned to love
Because “they” she said could carry
A tune
And spoke in accents never heard
In Eatonton.
Who read from Prose and Poetry
And loved to read “Sam McGee from Tennessee”
On nights the fire was burning low
And Christmas wrapped in angel hair
And I for one prayed for snow.


Who In The Fifties

Knew all the written things that made
Us laugh and stories by
The hour Waking up the story buds
Like fruit. Who walked among the flowers
And brought them inside the house
And smelled as good as they
And looked as bright.
Who made dresses, braided
Hair. Moved chairs about
Hung things from walls
Ordered baths
Frowned on wasp bites
And seemed to know the endings
Of all the tales
I had forgot.

Who Off Into The University

Went exploring To London and
To Rotterdam
Prague and Liberia
Bringing back the news to us
Who knew none of it
But followed
crops and weather
funerals and
Methodist Homecoming
easter speeches,
groaning church.

Who Found Another World

Another Life With gentlefolk
far less trusting
And moved and moved and changed
Her name
And sounded precise
When she spoke And frowned away
Our sloppiness.

Who Saw Us Silent

Cursed with fear A love burning
Inexpressible
And sent me money not for me
But for “College”
Who saw me grow through letters
The words misspelled But not
The longing Stretching
Growth
The tied and twisting
Tongue
Feet no longer bare
Skin no longer burnt against
The cotton.

Who Became Someone Overhead

A light A thousand watts
Bright and also blinding
And saw my brother cloddish
And me destined to be
Wayward
My mother remote My father
A wearisome farmer
With heartbreaking
Nails.

For My Sister Who In The Fifties

Found much
Unbearable
Who walked where few had
Understood And sensed our
Groping after light
And saw extinguished
and no doubt mourned.

For My Sister Who In The Fifties

Left us.

by Alice Walker
from Her Blue Body Everything We Know
Harvest Books, 1991