Farm Wife by R.S. Thomas
Hers is the clean apron, good for fire
Or lamp to embroider, as we talk slowly
In the long kitchen, while the white dough
Turns to pastry in the great oven,
Sweetly and surely as hay making
In a June meadow; hers are the hands,
Humble with milking, but still now
In her wide lap as though they heard
A quiet music, hers is the voice
That coaxes time back to the shadows
In the rooms corners.
O, hers is all
This strong body, the safe island
Where men may come, sons and lovers,
Daring the cold seas of her eyes.
1 comment:
There's something about this poem that rubs me the wrong way, but I can't figure out what, exactly. It seems to have a slightly condescending, misogynistic tone, except I can't explain precisely why I think that. Ack.
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