What Was That Poem?

My mother asked me, What was that poem?
It was Longfellow’s “My Lost Youth,” I think.
The answer was Longfellow, often enough,
even though she never liked Evangeline.

I talked to my mother on my cellphone
outside a grocery store in Philadelphia.
She asked me what I was buying, Was it dear?,
and if I now liked football more than baseball.

It was the last conversation I ever had with her.
I told her I liked baseball, to make her happy.
I knew she wasn’t calling to talk sports.
She was showing off, saying, “I’m going to be okay!”

What was that poem? she’d say and act surprised
when I didn’t know. It wasn’t about the answer.
It was about noticing something held on to,
with wit and ferocity, until the day is done.
David McGimpsey teaches creative writing at Concordia University in Montreal. He has published numerous collections of poetry, most recently Li’l Bastard (2011).

3 comment(s)

PatriciaOctober 12, 2011 16:18 EST

Grasping at straws? It seems like it is human nature to do so—poetry, of sorts!

AnonymousNovember 29, 2011 23:57 EST

I love my mother just a bit more after reading this.
I won\'t share it with her mind you cuz she\'d probably
end up loving herself just a bit more as a result.

AnonymousMay 16, 2012 12:02 EST

Hey David

Bravo for your \'with wit and ferocity\'....\'something held on to\'....in this poem.
Writing, as you taught us, with the slant that can\'t look loss in the eye. Beautiful.

Here in Victoria, Zoe Dickinson and I are in a poetry group together. We mention you often, my dear.

Judith

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