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Ellen Bryant Voigt - Lesson

Whenever my mother, who taught
small children forty years,
asked a question, she
already knew the answer.
"Would you like to" meant
you would. "Shall we" was
another, and "Don't you think."
As in "Don't you think
it's time you cut your hair."

So when, in the bare room,
in the strict bed, she said,
"You want to see?" her hands
were busy at her neckline,
untying the robe, not looking
down at it, stitches
bristling where the breast
had been, but straight at me.

I did what I always did:
not weep --she never wept--
and made my face a kindly
whitewashed wall, so she
could write, again, whatever
she wanted there.

Added: Feb 20 2003 | Viewed: 1062 times | Comments and analysis of Lesson by Ellen Bryant Voigt Comments (0)


Lesson - Comments and Information

Poet: Ellen Bryant Voigt
Poem: Lesson
Volume: The Atlantic Monthly
Year: Published/Written in 2002
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