For National Poetry Month 2014, I have invited 17 authors and poets to guest post about source poems. In this series of essays, each writer will describe a single poem's significance in his or her life.
Our guest blogger for today's source poem is poet and children's author Jacqueline Jules.
Jacqueline Jules |
Well, son, I’ll
tell you:
Life for me
ain’t been no crystal stair.
It’s had tacks
in it,
And splinters,
And boards torn
up,
And places with
no carpet on the floor—
Bare.
But all the time
I’se been
a-climbin’ on,
And reachin’
landin’s,
And turnin’
corners,
And sometimes
goin’ in the dark
Where there
ain’t been no light.
So boy, don’t
you turn back.
Don’t you set
down on the steps
’Cause you finds
it’s kinder hard.
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.
Langston Hughes,
“Mother to Son” from Collected Poems. Copyright © 1994 by The Estate of
Langston Hughes. Reprinted with the permission of Harold Ober Associates
Incorporated. Source: The Collected Poems of Langston Hughes (Vintage Books,
1994)
Located at http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/177021
My Ethical Will:
“Mother to Son”
“Mother to Son”
by Langston Hughes comes as close to an ethical will as I could ever write to
my own sons and grandchildren. Life may sparkle brilliantly at times, but it is
not a crystal staircase. Instead of shining steps transparently waiting to lead
us to our dreams, we must face tacks, splinters, and “boards torn up.”
My work as an
author and a poet has been fraught with as much rejection as success. This year
I had two picture books published. NeverSay a Mean Word Again took 16 years from idea to publication. What a Way to Start a
New Year required 24 years. In June, Stronger
Than Cleopatra, a poetry chapbook I’ve been working on for 20 years, will
finally be made available to readers through ELJ Publications.
I am intimately familiar with “reachin’ landin’s,” “turnin’ corners,” and “a-climbin’
on.” Rejection is a part of a writer’s life and choosing to sit down every time
it happens means being stuck on a rotting staircase with your head in your
hands.
This is not to
say I haven’t been tripped by other things. Grief has certainly tempted me to
sit down on too many occasions. I lost my first husband when I was 37 years
old. My parents died nine months apart. Less than two years ago, I watched my
only sister painfully succumb to a debilitating genetic disease at the same
time another family member was diagnosed with cancer. Sometimes I question my
ability to handle what may lie ahead. The height of the staircase is daunting.
It offers no view of how many steps must be climbed before the next landing.
And if I feel weak and lean too hard on the rail, it sways.
Perseverance, as
portrayed so eloquently in “Mother to Son,” has redeeming power. To keep “a-climbing
on” and “turnin’ corners,” even when it means “goin’ in the dark” is to
recognize that better alternatives do not exist. The narrator in this poem
provides both a courageous model and a challenge. If she keeps climbing when
her life hasn’t been “a crystal stair,” then her son can face disappointments,
too. A parent with a stubborn streak is a powerful inspiration. The voice in my
head that keeps me moving when I’d rather collapse often sounds exactly like my
father’s.
The staircase
beckons, even when there are “places with no carpet on the floor.” Our job in
life is to keep climbing. To accept that life is supposed to be meaningful, not
easy.
And when I reach
my final landing, I hope it will be said that I always had the courage to
follow the sage advice Langston Hughes offers in “Mother to Son.”
Jacqueline
Jules is the author of the poetry chapbooks, Field Trip to the Museum, coming in March from Finishing Line
Press, and Stronger Than Cleopatra,
coming in June from ELJ publications. Her poetry has appeared in numerous
publications including Inkwell, Soundings Review, The Innisfree Poetry Journal, Potomac Review, Minimus, Imitation Fruit,
Calyx, Connecticut River Review, and Pirene's
Fountain. She is also the author of two dozen books for young readers
including the Zapato Power series, No English, Sarah Laughs, and Never Say a Mean Word Again. Visit her online
at www.jacquelinejules.com
Thank you for sharing your personal connection to this poem, Jacqueline. The stories that we have been telling in connection with source poems have made this a powerful National Poetry Month series.
Here is a word animation with a dramatic reading of Jacqueline's source poem, "Mother to Son":
Previous posts in this series:
Laura Shovan on "This Is Just to Say" by William Carlos Williams
Dylan Bargteil on "On Moral Leadership as a Political Dilemma" by June Jordan
J. C. Elkin on "Hannibal Clim" (author unknown)
Diane Mayr on a haiku by Basho
Jone MacCulloch on "We Are Waiting (a pantoum)" by Joyce Sidman
Mary Bargteil on Four Quartets by T. S. Eliot
6 comments:
"Ethical will" -- what a marvelous concept!! One of the most useful tools any of us can have (or offer someone else) is perseverance. Nice choice, Jacqueline. As the Japanese proverb says, "Fall down seven times, stand up eight."
With your positive attitude, I didn't realize that you have been through so much, Jacqueline--and some of it during times when we have corresponded regularly, even. You have handled it all with such grace!
Right on! I'm going to share this with everyone I know, not just writers.
There's been much that I've read lately about the need to help youth acquire 'grit', and now from your inspiring post, I have a new look at it, ethical will. Your poem is one I have used with students, hoping to begin some self reflection from the lesson that mother is telling her son. It is powerful, and I loved hearing your strong connection to it, too. Thank you.
You've always gone a step farther than the narrator in the poem--not just climbing but always being sure to bring others up along with you. Thanks for the inspiration during National Poetry Month and at other times!
Jacqueline, yours is such an inspiring story and spirit. Thank you for sharing this powerful poem and your ethical will. Tremendous.
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