My Life Poem by Mark Strand

My Life

Rating: 4.0


The huge doll of my body
refuses to rise.
I am the toy of women.
My mother

would prop me up for her friends.
"Talk, talk," she would beg.
I moved my mouth
but words did not come.

My wife took me down from the shelf.
I lay in her arms. "We suffer
the sickness of self," she would whisper.
And I lay there dumb.

Now my daughter
gives me a plastic nurser
filled with water.
"You are my real baby," she says.

Poor child!
I look into the brown
mirrors of her eyes
and see myself

diminishing, sinking down
to a depth she does not know is there.
Out of breath,
I will not rise again.

I grow into my death.
My life is small
and getting smaller. The world is green.
Nothing is all.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Bijay Kant Dubey 03 January 2019

It is a poem here where he thinks about his mother, wife, sister and daughter, his relation emanating from.

0 0 Reply
Paresh Chakra 29 November 2018

This poem is very nice poem 10++++++++

0 0 Reply
Pooja prajapathi 11 February 2018

This poem is Soooooo touching it connects to me too

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Mark Strand

Mark Strand

Prince Edward Island, Canada
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