I began my stint as a member of the Harriet community by writing a column on Lucille Clifton, how amazing she was, what a spectacular poet and reader. Tonight I’ll be going to a PSA event at which her life and legacy will be honored. And so again, I begin my stint as a member of the Harriet community writing about Lucille Clifton.
I was reading through one of her collections the other day, and came across the poem I’ll reprint below. (Lucille Clifton has some lovely stanza breaks in her original poem that this blog software won't let me duplicate. Please pardon their omission.)
Months from my own 38th birthday, I thought I would reread Clifton’s piece and see if I found wisdom in it I had not seen when I first became acquainted with the poem in my teens, and again in my twenties and early thirties. And, indeed, I did find something new this time. I always find something new when I revisit Lucille Clifton’s work. She was a sort of prophet, you see. And with great prophesy, we don’t always know what has been revealed until much much further down the road. She wrote this poem very near to the true mathematical middle of her life. Did she know? She was a visionary, Lucille Clifton. She was “wise and beautiful and sad.” She was no ordinary woman.
the thirty eight year
of my life,
plain as bread
round as cake
an ordinary woman.
an ordinary woman.
i had expected to be
smaller than this,
more beautiful,
wiser in afrikan ways,
more confident,
i had expected
more than this.
i will be forty soon.
my mother once was forty.
my mother died at forty four,
a woman of sad countenance
leaving behind a girl
awkward as a stork.
my mother was thick,
her hair was a jungle and
she was very wise
and beautiful
and sad.
i have dreamed dreams
for you mama
more than once.
i have wrapped me
in your skin
and made you live again
more than once.
i have taken the bones you hardened
and built daughters
and they blossom and promise fruit
like afrikan trees.
i am a woman now.
an ordinary woman.
in the thirty eighth
year of my life,
surrounded by life,
a perfect picture of
blackness blessed,
i had not expected this
loneliness.
if it is western,
if it is the final
europe in my mind,
if in the middle of my life
i am turning the final turn
into the shining dark
let me come to it whole
and holy
not afraid
not lonely
out of my mother’s life
into my own.
into my own.
i had expected more than this.
i had not expected to be
an ordinary woman.
Lucille Clifton
from good woman: poems and a memoir 1969-1980
BOA Editions, Ltd.
Poet and editor Camille T. Dungy was born in Denver but moved often as her father, an academic physician...
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