Mississippi: Origins
My parents come from a place where all the houses stop at one story
for the heat. Where every porch--front and back--simmers in black screens that sieve
mosquitoes from our blood. Where everyone knows there's only one kind of tea:
served sweet. The first time my father introduced my mother to his parents,
his mother made my mother change the bed sheets in the guest room. She'd believed it
a gesture of intimacy. My grandmother saved lavender hotel soaps and lotions
to wrap and mail as gifts at Christmas. My grandfather once shot the head off a rattlesnake
in the gravel driveway of the house he built in Greenwood. He gave the dry rattle to my mother
the same week I was born, saying, Why don't you make something out of it.
Copyright � 2013 by Anna Journey. Used with permission of the author.
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About This Poem
"In my poem 'Mississippi: Origins' anecdotal fragments--sharp and sweet, poignant and stark--combine to create a locus for the family lyric. And that dried up rattlesnake rattle (which my mother declined to make into a baby rattle) definitely ranks as one of my family's stranger heirlooms. That and the pair of brass knuckles my white-haired great-aunts, Mary and Joanna, kept in their shared house, in case they were called upon to punch potential burglars in the face. And the skull fragment from medical school my other grandfather, L.C., used as an ashtray. We're a well-adjusted bunch."
--Anna Journey
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Most Recent Book by Journey
(Louisiana State University Press, 2013)
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