Jemma Leigh Roe

Poetry

Jemma Leigh Roe is the author of Running with the Hare, winner of the 2024 Slapering Hol Press Chapbook Competition. Her poems and artwork have appeared in Sonora Review, Redivider, The Baltimore Review, Northwest Review, and Tupelo Quarterly, among others. She holds a PhD in Romance Languages and Literatures from Princeton University.

 

Ma

The memory of your hands, gutting whitefish, fresh-eyed after the storm. We were hungry for iridescence. Lit by the amber sun- set in the oven, its iron mouth opening wide, steam billowing to meet your bowing head. You bring this warm offering in mother-of-pearl a glisten of sea and sky, as I watch you collect fishbones in a small bowl veined with silver. We are more water than bones, you say, with arms that flutter like terns to chase away flies from our table of daily bread. I mine this memory— a mother lode of hours watching clocks with missing hands packing clothes, linens, china your miniature biographies bundled away, and yet— what remains? Empty plates, empty closets. So much emptiness to bear in the fullness of time.

The word ‘Ma’ is also a term in Japanese culture that refers to an empty space or the perception of one.