Echoing Mothers

July 25, 2024

I hear mothers,
young and old,
rich and not-so-poor,
Believers, atheists, heathen
I hear their staggering steps
zigzagging through
former husbands,
current flings,
the faltering economy.
I hear their symphonies–
son’s first tooth fall,
daughter’s first ballet,
first culinary experiment.
I hear, too, their erratic quartets;
custody battles,
nursing a sick child,
telling the daughter
better lovers
await her yet.
As I hear the ebb and
flow of their rivers–
slushing, gentle, roaring,
I find my mother’s echo
rippling ashore.

Bhaswati Ghosh

Bhaswati Ghosh writes and translates fiction, non-fiction and poetry. Her first book of fiction is Victory Colony, 1950. Her first work of translation from Bengali into English is My Days with Ramkinkar Baij. Bhaswati’s writing has appeared in several literary journals. She lives in Ontario, Canada. Find her at bhaswatighosh.com.

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