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Mark Gibbons


Larva
I.
They hang in the dark
corner of a room, three black
duffel bag sized sacks
like giant eggplants, upside down,
wrapped in a woven membrane
like a nylon sock. The face
pressed in the bottom of one pouch, 
eyelids closed, is a girl I knew
from high school, her hands 
still puffy, clammy & cold.
Though always small in stature,
she is the largest of these 
intruders ? slick bat-like larvae
who wait with me this night to be born.
Lazily she unfolds her almond eyes.
I can't decide if she recognizes me. 

II.
My mother has come to visit, now
eighty-three. She wears the winter
coat I remember from the fifties, 
carries her snap-lock pocket book
over one wrist, & a Kleenex in her hand
that she uses to dab at her nose.
She looks tired & old as she fights 
back tears. When I ask what's wrong,
her voice cracks to a whine.
Her mother's gone. She watched
her die. Slowly & gently 
I pull her into me, hold her softly 
& rub her back. I kiss her hair
to soothe us, to open our eyes,
so we can bear the uncertainty
of form ? our ongoing metamorphosis.


other work by Mark Gibbons
Dementia (2001, June)


Mark Gibbons lives in Missoula, Montana with his wife and two sons where he's a poet in the schools with the Missoula Writing Collaborative. He drives truck and moves furniture to pay rent. His poems have appeared in CutBank, Talking River Review, The Midwest Quarterly, The Comstock Review and Rattle. His second chapbook, Circling Home won the Scattered Cairns Press chapbook contest. His first collection of poems was entitled Something Inside Us, 1995. He was published in earlier issues of Gumball Poetry here and here


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Suzanne G. Griffith from Bremerton, Washington  |  2002-10-22
Nice surprises
I was drawn into this poem by the startling image in the excerpt and continued reading, expecting to be disappointed by continued strangeness to no purpose. But a purpose arose, and a beautiful purpose it is. What a lovely image of a mother! This is a deep and original study of transformation.











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