Dec. 31st, 2006

While Dorothy Parker is best-known for her sharp-tongued, sardonic, and utterly delightful perspectives on love, I ran across this poem of hers on December 26 and found it terribly evocative.

Prayer For A New Mother
Dorothy Parker

The things she knew, let her forget again-
The voices in the sky, the fear, the cold,
The gaping shepherds, and the queer old men
Piling their clumsy gifts of foreign gold.

Let her have laughter with her little one;
Teach her the endless, tuneless songs to sing,
Grant her her right to whisper to her son
The foolish names one dare not call a king.

Keep from her dreams the rumble of a crowd,
The smell of rough-cut wood, the trail of red,
The thick and chilly whiteness of the shroud
That wraps the strange new body of the dead.

Ah, let her go, kind Lord, where mothers go
And boast his pretty words and ways, and plan
The proud and happy years that they shall know
Together, when her son is grown a man.
Fighting Words
Dorothy Parker

Say my love is easy had,
Say I'm bitten raw with pride,
Say I am too often sad-
Still behold me at your side.

Say I'm neither brave nor young,
Say I woo and coddle care,
Say the devil touched my tongue-
Still you have my heart to wear.

But say my verses do not scan,
And I get me another man!

------------

This and more at http://poetry.poetryx.com/poets/64/. (A quiet thanks to Karen Hillyer for showing me this archive goes here.) Enjoy!

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