The American Scholar

Five Poems

The Chair

You have to first
Sit in the temple gloom
In the mahogany chair
& despair.

The only glimmer
In the temple (being the inlaid bits of
The Mother-
Of-Pearl shells
On the tall, more than humanly tall
Chair back, for these

These too
Are the reputed “Tears of Things”
Of this world as seen
By the world.

In that other chair behind Temple curtains Sits Mother Mother Who believed For a good part of her later life You were there somewhere In the temple Writing A book About her. She could hear you In Girls? “May your life be messy, Your poems tidy.”) Mother’s life was not tidy. About mother poems were written By several poets, including herself “Non-fiction” (her own) Some very good.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The American Scholar

The American Scholar6 min read
Lunching With Rabi
On October 28, 1964, when I was 26 years old and in my first semester as an instructor in Columbia University’s English Department, my father called and asked if I’d read an article in The New York Times that morning about I. I. Rabi. I had not. “Wel
The American Scholar13 min read
The Widower's Lament
STEVEN G. KELLMAN’S books include Rambling Prose, Redemption: The Life of Henry Roth, and The Translingual Imagination. Parting is all we know of heaven, And all we need of hell. —Emily Dickinson I had been asleep for a few hours when the policeman a
The American Scholar4 min read
We've Gone Mainstream
Marie Arana’s sprawling portrait of Latinos in the United States is rich and nuanced in its depiction of the diversity of “the least understood minority.” Yet LatinoLand is regrettably old-fashioned and out-of-date. For starters, Hispanics aren’t rea

Related Books & Audiobooks