My granny
takes canary sips
from her service-station tea,
jaundiced eyes lantern-bright
as she asks, again,
who the ambulance is for.is magpie-quick
the nurses say,
fills her knicker drawer
with plasters, rubber gloves,
someone else’s dentures.sticks her beak in other rooms
Look at’em! Lolling!
picks over the injustice
like a pigeon
pecking at its bruised breast.preens;
her curled fingers
clawing damp strands.
Presently, she says,
I shall ask you to leave.sings of her cuckoo-child,
sees his father one day in me
and cups my face,
tells me I have nothing
to be sorry for.lies in a sketch of stillness:
eyes and mouth drawn
pencil-thin.
A sense of
something flown.
COMMENT
Liz Soar teaches English and French at a school in Oxford. This poem was written in response to an assignment on Claire Askew’s course Creatrix: Women’s Poetries for the 21st Century.
‘A year 7 pupil recently asked me how long it takes to write a poem; in this case, it was about 20 years. Some of these images have appeared in other attempts to write about my grandmother, but it took a prompt from Claire’s course to bring them all together.’
‘She’s a game old bird’
Posted in Poems 9 years ago
9 Comments
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I love this poem Liz, thanks
Beautiful image in “eyes lantern bright” and also in “sketch of stillness”. Powerful for me to read, thanks, Liz.
very emotive my nan was that lady also who filled her knicker draw with others bits and bobs, a ‘sense of something flown ‘ very strong .