poem to my yellow coat
today i mourn my coat.
my old potato.
my yellow mother.
my horse with buttons.
my rind.
today she split her skin
like a snake,
refusing to excuse my back
for being big
for being old
for reaching toward other
cuffs and sleeves.
Lucille Clifton was an American poet, writer, and educator. She won the National Book Award for Poetry in 2000 and in 2010 was awarded the Robert Frost Medal, which honors “distinguished lifetime service to American poetry.”
Photo by Rachel Eliza Griffiths
today i mourn my coat.
my old potato.
my yellow mother.
my horse with buttons.
my rind.
today she split her skin
like a snake,
refusing to excuse my back
for being big
for being old
for reaching toward other
cuffs and sleeves.
i have gathered my losses
into a spray of pain;
my parents, my brother,
my husband, my innocence
all clustered together
durable as daisies.
in the latter days
you will come to a place
called memphis.
it lay in my palm soft and trembled
as a new bird and i thought about
authority and how it always insisted