My mother’s soup-bowl has a lid,
And knobs on each side.
Squat, and plain, with a primitive design
Painted in earth colours,
It reminds me of my mother,
With knobs on.
She died,
Not yet seventy.
Carotid arteries choked
By almost a lifetime of rich food.
Carrot broth in her sixties did little good
For a woman who hated vegetables.
I recall her eating Heinz tomato soup.
She supped her warm medicine.
Pursed lips drew liquid from spoon –
A stilted ritual.
When the last drop was gone,
She put the lid on.
Now, years later,
Nourishment swelters
Under primitive earth-colours.
I take the lid off,
Release a spicy cloud,
And sip her memory from my spoon.
I empty the bowl,
Just like she did,
But when I am finished,
I leave off the lid.
About the author:
Mavis Moog lives in Derbyshire, England. Between walking her standard poodles in the beautiful hills of the Peak District and running poetry workshops, she works as a private tutor and creative writing lecturer at a further education college.
Mavis is working on an anthology of works by local poets, supported by the poetry workshop.
Her Chapbook of eighteen poems is available by e-mailing Mavis@writing.com with a postal address.
Credits:
The Mavis Moog Book of Short Stories , published July 2005.
Short Story: Roger, The Talking Poodle , appeared on UK Literary e-zine, The Beat
Poem: Tale of the Rumpfed Runyon
The Mud Sculpture – Word Riot December 2008
Portfolio URL: http://Writing.Com/authors/mavis

