Poetry |

“Mother As Bird” & “Red Tricycle”

Mother As Bird

 

 

No squawking. No blackbird’s frantic flapping,

no keeping close to the ground

to protect us in the field —

 

none of that

the predatory muskrat’s brown eyes might rise like two dark moons

in the tall grass and                      nothing.

 

I stopped talking to her through my skin …

 

On the living room couch, I might confuse her arms around me,

 

draped in a long-sleeved indigo silk blouse,

for bluebird wings, cradling me for those few moments.

 

When my older sister tied me to a chair with package twine

and taped my mouth —

 

no maternal outrage.

 

Bits of twine and field grass, the ravaged tape ripped

from my mouth which feathered the hidden nest

 

that we called home.

 

 

*     *     *     *      *

 

 

Red Tricycle

 

 

Reflections of clouds and trees

shone on its silver handlebars but only for a moment

before they’d slide away,

 

and others would roll over the rounded

chrome in delightfully distorted reflections — the first time

I felt my movement

 

through the world could change things.

Pushing the pedals, round and round

again and again, making circles

 

of air that I could feel in my legs.

these orbs would materialize, slip free

from the tricycle’s white plastic pedals

 

for children to play with.

And the cutting shrill of silver bell

hoping to clear the air of any harm.

Contributor
Sally Bliumis-Dunn

Sally Bliumis-Dunn is an Associate Editor-at-Large and features writer for Plume. Her poems have appeared in 32 Poems, New Ohio Review, On the Seawall, The Paris Review, Poetry London, Prairie Schooner, the New York Times, PBS NewsHour, The Writer’s Almanac, and Academy of American Poets’ Poem-a-day, among others. Her third full-length collection, Echolocation, was published by Plume Editions/Madhat Press (2018).

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