The sixteenth Moon Prize* on this Happy New Year full moon goes to Elise Stuart's evocative poem
"Burnt" —backdating to the full moon of December 3, 2017.
Burnt
by
Elise Stuart
My
grandma likes to burn food.
She
burns toast on a regular basis,
teaching
me to love the slightly black triangles
she
serves for breakfast.
Some
mornings she scrapes the black
from
the pieces with a butter knife.
Other
times she just tosses the toast out the back
window
onto a little patch of grass
where
the pine tree stands―for the birds, she says.
Later
in the morning, I go outside, make sure no one is looking,
pick up
the burnt toast and eat it.
It
makes me feel wild, eating off the grass, breaking the rules,
something
my grandma would never allow.
She
burns pot roasts on Sundays too.
Potatoes
and onions are always singed,
the
strips of carrots, black along their thin sides.
She
never burns cakes or cookies, sweet things she loves.
Is it
her way of rebelling?
Does
her anger move up through her body
and
torch the bottom of pans?
Does
she long to be free of her assigned domain, the kitchen,
where
red cardinals stand still on ivy-covered bricks?
Nights,
she stays up late,
sewing
on her black featherweight Singer.
She
makes dresses, invents new patterns,
the
soft fabric moving quickly beneath her fingers.
Sometimes
she lets me sleep downstairs in her room,
snuggled
under the heavy wool blanket,
the
sound of the sewing machine―
a
lullaby that covers me
sets
her free.
* * * * *
"Burnt" is from Elise Stuart's memoir My
Mother and I We Talk Cat.
Elise Stuart moved to Silver City in 2005, and her heart
opened to the desert. She found the creative current to be strong in this
southwest corner of New Mexico, and she found beauty in the land and rivers and
sky and in the people who live here. In 2014, when she was chosen Poet Laureate
of Silver City, she envisioned young people expressing themselves through
poetry so during the next three years, so she gave over a hundred workshops to
youth. She continues with this work. In the spring of 2017 her first collection
of poems was published, Another Door Calls.
* The Moon Prize ($91) is awarded once a month
on the full moon for a story or poem posted in Writing In A Woman's Voice
during the moon cycle period preceding that full moon. I don't want this to be
competition. I simply want to share your voices. And then I want to pick one
voice during a moon cycle for the prize. I fund this with 10% of my personal
modest income. I wish I could pay for each and every poem or story, but I am not
that rich. (Yet.) For the time being I still run a month behind with this
prize—I expect to catch up to the current month soon.
Why 91? 91 is a mystical number for me. It is 7
times 13. 13 is my favorite number. (7 isn't half bad either.) There are 13
moons in a year. I call 13 my feminist number, reasoning that anything that was
declared unlucky in a patriarchal world has to be mystically excellent. Then
there are 4 times 91 days in a year (plus one day, or two days in leap years),
so approximately 91 days each season. In some Mayan temples there are or were
91 steps on each of four sides. Anyway, that's where the number 91 comes from,
not to mention that it's in the approximate neighborhood of 100.
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