Communion
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About the Book
This third collection builds upon her previous writings and new
experiences to provide a healing voice, additional depth and
maturity, and an international perspective in considering the art
of poetry itself, male/female relationships, separation from
children, homeland, tradition.
Highlighted Review
"Mora's collection is aptly titled: her poems
often reveal a communion of sorts between poet and subject that
inspires the poet's empathetic, imaginative response." —Betsy
Colquitt, Texas Review of Books
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Seņora X No More
Straight as a nun I sit.
My fingers foolish before paper and pen
hide in my palms. I hear the slow, accented echo
How are yu? I ahm fine. How are yu?
of the other women who clutch notebooks
and blush at their stiff lips resisting
sounds that float gracefully as
bubbles from their children's mouths.
My teacher bends over me, gently squeezes
my shoulders, the squeeze I give my sons,
hands louder than words.
She slides her arms around me:
a warm shawl, lifts my left arm
onto the cold, lined paper.
"Seņora, don't let it slip away," she says
and opens the ugly, soap-wrinkled fingers
of my right hand with a pen like I pry open
the lips of a stubborn grandchild.
My hand cramps around the thin hardness.
"Let it breathe," says this woman who knows
my hand and tongue knot, but she guides
and I dig the tip of my pen into that white.
I carve my crooked name, and again at night
until my hand and arm are sore,
I carve my crooked name,
my name.
©Pat Mora
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