Sunday, June 28, 2009

Poetry

My mom got this poem at some point and it hung on our fridge for a long time. I'm not sure why, but it was there. I am not a big fan of most poetry, but it always resonated strongly with me for some reason, and it is one of my favorite poems. It is a shortened version of the original, which I didn't find out until years later.

To Santa Claus and Little Sisters

Once ... he wrote a poem.
And called it "Chops",
Because it was the name of his dog, and that's what it was all about.
And the teacher gave him an "A"
And a gold star,
And his mother hung it on the kitchen door, and read it to all his aunts ...

Once ... he wrote another poem.
And he called it "Question Marked Innocence".
Because that was the name of his grief and that's what it was all about.
And the professor gave him an "A"
And a strange and steady look.
And his mother never hung it on the kitchen door,
Because he never let her see it ...

Once, at 3 a.m. ... he tried another poem ...
And he called it absolutely nothing, because that's what it was all about.
And he gave himself an "A"
And a slash on each damp wrist,
And hung it on the bathroom door because he couldn't reach the kitchen.

This poem was written by a 15-year old boy, 2 years before he committed suicide, most likely in the late-60's.

Here's the original:

To Santa Claus and Little Sisters

Once,
On yellow paper, with green lines, he wrote a poem,
And called it "Chops",
Because that was the name of his dog,
And that’s what it was all about.
And the teacher gave him an "A"
And a gold star,
And his mother hung it on the kitchen door,
And read it to all his aunts.
That was the year his sister was born,
With tiny toenails and no hair,
And Father Tracy took them to the zoo
And let them sing on the bus.
And his mother and father kissed a lot
And the girl around the corner sent him a Christmas card
Signed with a row of x's.
And his father always tucked him in at night,
And he was always there to do it.

Once,
On white paper, with blue lines, he wrote another poem.
And he called it "Autumn"
Because that was the name of a season,
And that’s what it was all about.
And the teacher gave him an "A"
And told him to write more clearly.
And his mother didn’t hang it on the kitchen door
Because the door
Had just been painted.
That was the year his sister got glasses,
With black frames and thick lenses.
And the kids told him why father and mother
Kissed a lot,
And that Father Tracy smoked cigars
And left butts on the pews,
And the girl around the block laughed
When he went to see Santa Claus at Macy’s.
And his father stopped tucking him in bed at night,
And got mad when he cried for him to.

Once,
On paper torn from his notebook, he wrote another poem,
And he called it "Question Marked Innocence",
Because that was the name of his grief
And that’s what it was all about.
And the professor gave him an "A"
And a strange and steady look.
And his mother never hung it on the door
Because he never let her see it.
That year he found his sister necking on the back porch
And his parents never kissed, or even smiled.
And he forgot how the end of the "Apostle’s Creed" went,
And Father Tracy died.
And the girl around the block wore too much make-up
That made him cough when he kissed her,
But he kissed her anyway.

Once,
At 3 a.m., he tucked himself in bed,
His father snoring soundly.
He tried another poem, on the back of a pack of matches,
And he called it "absolutely nothing"
Because that’s what it was all about.
And he gave himself an "A"
And a slash on each damp wrist,
And hung it on the bathroom door,
Because he couldn’t reach the kitchen.

5 comments:

SkippyMom said...

That is so sad Christopher.

I would never hope any of my kids were ever this sad and that I am there to help them if they are.

sigh.

selfreq said...

Have you ever talked to your mom about the poem?

It is pretty depressing.

christopher said...

To clarify, I've never reached a point in my life when I actually wanted to take my life. But this poem really struck a chord with me when I was bummed out throughout highschool.

I asked her about it once, and she said it was there because she liked it. I'm not really sure why, we didn't really get into it. I should ask her about it now, I have a very different relationship with my parents than I did back then.

selfreq said...

I like it too, dude. It is very powerful.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for posting this. My English teacher in 9th grade Lit read this poem to my class in 1980 and I've remembered it off & on over the years but couldn't remember it exactly. Was just as strongly moved by it, reading it again - nearly 30 years later.