Gwendolyn Brooks


Gwendolyn Brooks has influenced my own poetry since I was very young, and this is the first poem I ever read by her that made me realize the effectiveness of poetry in conveying something other than the usual "love and blossoms in Springtime" type scheme. This poem is also one of my favourites because of the narrator's confusion as to what is right or wrong in the matter of abortion. She, like many women, neither condones nor disputes it.

the mother


   Abortions will not let you forget.
   You remember the children you got that you did not get,
   The damp small pulps with a little or with no hair,
   The singers and the workers that never handled the air.
   You will never neglect or beat
   Them, or silence or buy with a sweet.
   You will never wind up the sucking-thumb,
   Or scuttle off ghosts that come.
   You will never leave them, controlling your luscious sigh,
   Return for a snack of them, with gobbling mother-eye.

   I have heard in the voices of the wind the voices of my dim
           killed children.
   I have contracted. I have eased
   My dim dears at the breasts they could never suck.
   I have said, Sweets, if I sinned, if I seized
   Your luck
   And your lives from your unfinished reach,
   If I stole your births and your names,
   Your straight baby tears and your games,
   Your stilted or lovely loves, your tumults, your marriages,
          aches, and your deaths,
   If I poisoned the beginnings of your breaths,
   Believe that even in my deliberateness I was not deliberate.
   Though why should I whine,
   Whine that the crime was other than mine?-
   Since anyhow you are dead.
   Or rather, or instead,
   You were never made.
   But that too, I am afraid,
   Is faulty: oh, what shall I say, how is the truth to be said?
   You were born, you had body, you died.
   It is just that you never giggled or planned or cried.

   Believe me, I loved you all.
   Believe me, I knew you, though faintly, and I loved, I loved you
   All.

Other Poems by Gwendolyn Brooks:

When You Have Forgotten Sunday

A Gwendolyn Brooks Page


This work has been reproduced with the greatest of respect to the author, and I would be glad to ask for permission to reprint it here, except I'm not sure where to begin. If you have a copyright dispute, feel free to e-mail me.
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Last updated December 10th, 1997