May 17, 2025
More in My Words, My Time: Poetry of Anna Blake Godbout Corn Silk
Cornsilk is published in the latest issue of SMR. I am very proud to have had my work published with the high caliber of writers. A true class act along with my gratitude.
CORN SILK
My grandmother Cora picks firm pea pods and dangling green beans that stretch to the cool black earth. She sails up and down the aisle of corn stalks picking, husking, picking, husking. Sunflowers hover to shade her bent shoulders with their golden faces. I sit on the white rail fence with sweaty brown pigtails wondering if the buds on my breasts will ever be in full bloom, wondering if her hair was ever long, blonde enough to be corn silk.
We wear faded dish towels tied around our necks, threadbare drapes of checkered blue and white. The dinner table bulges with mismatched Pyrex bowls holding tomatoes, sweet corn and tender beans. Glass pitchers of ice tea floating lemon circles glimmer in the marmalade-colored dusk. Sweet cream butter melts into crevices of sun-yellow kernels, baking powder biscuits crumble onto Cora's summer-stained tablecloth. My grandfather nonchalantly whacks a blood-swollen mosquito on his arm. He does not miss.
Grandmother does not have many summers left to eat tomatoes or butter her husband's biscuits. She serves slices of rich pound cake smothered in strawberries frosted with sugar. My sister and I take one more swing on this hazy night before the full moon comes. We giggle until stars blink between oak branches. Crickets fiddle and fireflies dance among the blueberry bushes and Queen Anne's lace. Cora sighs, hating to see August leave. My grandfather takes her hand, and brushes tassels of corn silk off her shoulders.
|
1- Celticlion
on May 6 2008