Pages

30 July 2020: "My Mother" by Frieda Hughes

My Mother

They are killing her again.
She said she did it
One year in every ten,
But they do it annually, or weekly,
Some even do it daily,
Carrying her death around in their heads
And practising it. She saves them
The trouble of their own;
They can die through her
Without ever making
The decision. My buried mother
Is up-dug for repeat performances.

Now they want to make a film
For anyone lacking the ability
To imagine the body, head in oven,
Orphaning children. Then
It can be rewound
So they can watch her die
Right from the beginning again.

The peanut eaters, entertained
At my mother’s death, will go home,
Each carrying their memory of her,
Lifeless – a souvenir.
Maybe they’ll buy the video.

Watching someone on TV
Means all they have to do
Is press ‘pause’
If they want to boil a kettle,
While my mother holds her breath on screen
To finish dying after tea.
The filmmakers have collected
The body parts,
They want me to see.
They require dressings to cover the joins
And disguise the prosthetics
In their remake of my mother.
They want to use her poetry
As stitching and sutures
To give it credibility.
They think I should love it –
Having her back again, they think
I should give them my mother’s words
To fill the mouth of their monster,
Their Sylvia Suicide Doll,
Who will walk and talk
And die at will,
And die, and die
And forever be dying.

 Published in The Stonepicker and The Book of Mirrors

 

1 comment:

  1. After this month of reviewing Sylvia Plath in depth this poem hits me pretty hard. "They can die through her
    Without ever making The decision." I belong to this group. Her poetry stuns me for exactly the same reasons, but with a different twist. I don't feel like I am here reading for the glorification of death, but rather the mental state and Creative life that led to it. To see death so intimately through her eyes...but to a daughter I bet that looks just all the same. I am very glad that I came across this poem- it is quite a grand finale to this month's poetry. Perspective from the exact opposite angle- an aftermath.

    ReplyDelete