Literature Today, An International Literary Journal, put out a call for “The Stories We Carry”. I am pleased to see my poem “Maria Callas at the Pool” included in the latest edition. (And yes, I know, Maria Callas was Greek, not Italian, but you get the point. ) Read it here: http://literaturetodayjournal.blogspot.com or below:

MARIA CALLAS AT THE POOL

There were always crumbs on the table. Because of Papa’s bread.
Hard, crusty, oblong Italian bread. Because Papa was Italian and proud.
Proud of Dante and Caravaggio, proud of Tony Bennett and Perry Como,
proud of that bread.
I hated that bread.
Our Father, give us this day our daily….but not that Italian bread, please.
I longed for Wonder Bread, like my friend Annie Rutherford ate.
Maybe if I could eat soft, sliced, rectangular white bread my skin would lighten.
Mrs. Rutherford wouldn’t call me “swarthy”.
Maybe I’d be blond and blue-eyed like Annie and her sisters.
Maybe my vowel-studded name would change.

At school, when I said my father was a musician,
a teacher asked, with a smirk, if he were an organ grinder.
I blamed the bread,
even though that teacher had never seen our table, with Papa at the head,
his cufflinks sparkling, his mustache trimmed, holding court,
enjoying the giardiniera, swimming in olive oil,
the after-dinner cheese, as pungent as a pig pen.
Italians have been eating Taleggio since the 9th century, said Papa.

But this was the 20th century.
Mrs. Rutherford said Italians couldn’t join the swim club,
although I could come as a guest.
I packed a lunch, enough for everyone.
Italians never skimp on food, said Papa.
Of course, there were crumbs, falling on my bathing suit, on my lap,
on the flagstones around the pool.
I don’t remember if I had a good time that day.
I only remember a blue jay flying over the fence,
chirping and trilling like Maria Callas, pecking all the crumbs away.

5 responses to “Doesn’t this country belong to all of us?”

  1. I love this so much. I just posted it

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  2. Margaliet Ligtenstein Avatar
    Margaliet Ligtenstein

    Very nice

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  3. breillycomcastnet Avatar
    breillycomcastnet

    I love the title ! And I am touched by your ability to capture/remember the experiences of children…eg. you see their (& your own) inner childhood life. My former professor/colleague/friend Lynne Schilling writes beautiful poetry also and publishes some on Facebook fyi… A demain!

    >

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  4. Love the poem. I never realized how much your Italian heritage marked you as different, as other. It shocks me. It’s like being Jewish.

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  5. So enjoyed this. Often your stories/poems bring back memories, and here it is definitely about bread. When we lived in the Bronx, my dad would take us to the Italian section in Yonkers to get THAT bread, cold cuts and pastries. I loved that bread, always a special treat. We moved when I was 8, and there are no more Italian bread memories. There is the memory of the most disgusting lunch at a friend’s house….baloney on THAT white bread with butter and mayonnaise, and a glass of milk. That has remained as the worst lunch ever!Thanks, Gabriella.Louise

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