The only thing that feels better than the beginning of spring is a new magazine in your hands!

Check out our Spring Cleaning Sale and take 50% off our past Spring Issue catalogue! Now through April 30, 2024.

SUBSCRIBE Shop Donate Login

Photo by Brian McSwain, courtesy of the artist

Breaking

 

Two years ago today my mother died,
eighty-nine and brilliant, stubborn, brave.
I broke one of her cardinal rules and cried

aloud in the hospital hall—alive, beside
myself with all she took and all she gave.
Two years ago today my mother died.

Three weeks before, she’d been at work, pride
for a moment stronger than death’s wave.
I broke one of her cardinal rules and cried—

a lost daughter, the child to whom she’d lied
as if that would keep a monster in its cave.
Two years ago today my mother died

and freed us from her rules, where shut inside
we’d buried joy and anguish to behave.
I broke one of her cardinal rules and cried,

made a scene, a spectacle, did not hide 
my grief that it was me now I must save.
Two years ago today my mother died.
I broke the rules, I found love’s voice. I cried.


George Ella Lyon reads “Breaking”

Unable to embed Rapid1Pixelout audio player. Please double check that:  1)You have the latest version of Adobe Flash Player.  2)This web page does not have any fatal Javascript errors.  3)The audio-player.js file of Rapid1Pixelout has been included.

 


More of Brian McSwain’s photography can be found in his Eyes on the South feature.

Enjoy this poem? Subscribe to the Oxford American.
 




George Ella Lyon

George Ella Lyon’s recent poetry collections include She Let Herself Go, Many-Storied House, and Voices from the March on Washington, cowritten with J. Patrick Lewis. She is particularly interested in the poetry of witness, and she served as Poet Laureate of Kentucky from 2015 to 2016.