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Imagined Love Poem to My Mother from My Father

My mermaid, I watched you scaling milkfish.

Your hands and arms were silver,

and your body flecked

with otherworldly raindrops.

You were a silver mine to be mined.

Perched on a high branch of your mother's

mango tree, I saw only a glimmer

of the blade as you scaled the fish, up-

and-down strokes, repeatedly,

gracefully, like an artist whose gift courses

through her veins. A strand of your hair

danced across your forehead, sweat

trickled down the joyous strained lines

of your neck, and your breasts, like twin

bells, I heard their transcendental

sounds. The glistening, naked

milkfish escaped the warm Pacific

for such honor. Kismet, chosen by Neptune,

it entangled itself on the fisherman's

net and beckoned you with its fresh,

clear eyes. You sliced

its stomach, sweet blade twisting

in me, scooped out its innards,

the heart, pulled out the gills

from underneath its head's protective plates.

I almost fell off the tree, there was a deep

aching in my chest, and my breathing

was shallow. Crouched beside the spigot,

you pumped for water with brisk motions

of your brown arms, cleaning the fish, cradled

by the softest hands, blood

and scales streaming onto the earth.

Didn't you hear the fish mouthing my words

as you were salting it: Do unto me, the spy

up on the thick fruit tree, as you have done

unto the milkfish? One day I hope

to recite for you these verses

and in my voice you will hear,

from across the oceans surrounding

the archipelago, as if reverberated through

the ages, the voice of our future son.


from Imago (CavanKerry Press, 2007) by Joseph O. Legaspi


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