Celebrating mothers and daughters, mothers and sons, grandmothers and
grandchildren, Motherhood is a glorious, wonderfully intimate tribute
to the first love in every reader's life.
From tenth-century Japan's Izumi Shikibu, colonial America's Anne
Bradstreet, and Victorian England's Elizabeth Barrett Browning to
Israel's Yehuda Amichai, Ireland's Paul Muldoon, and Russia's Anna
Akhmatova, poets across the centuries and around the world have
immortalized this elemental relationship. Among the more than seventy
poets in this anthology, Audre Lorde recalls "How the days went / While
you were blooming within me"; Jorie Graham muses on her mother's sewing
box; Allen Ginsberg says goodbye in "Kaddish"; and Langston Hughes
invokes a mother's empowering example: "Don't you fall now-- / For I'se
still goin', honey, / I'se still climbin', / And life for me ain't been
no crystal stair." From Emily Brontë's "Upon Her Soothing Breast" and
Seamus Heaney's "Mother of the Groom" to Sylvia Plath's "Morning Song"
and Frank O'Hara's "Ave Maria," the more than one hundred poems
collected here enshrine the miracle of motherhood and the richness of
feeling and experience it inspires.