Poem

Mother Said it Would Be Alright When Frances Came

Title Mother Said it Would Be Alright When Frances Came
Author Leland Bardwell

Instances of Publication

A published appearance of this poem.

Collection/Anthology Year of Publication Medium View Details
Collected Poems (Leland Bardwell) 2022 Print Collection View Details
Publication Instance Details #3220
Collection/Anthology Details
Collection/Anthology Collected Poems (Leland Bardwell)
Date of Publication 2022
Publisher Salmon Poetry (Ireland)
Page Number(s) 201-204
Publication Overview
Translation Is Multilingual Explicit Irish Context? Ekphrasis Has Paratext? Reference to News, Media or Technology
No
No
Yes
No
No
No
Details
Human Rights Issues
Irish Context
Languages
Genre Long (narrative) Poem
Medium Print Collection
Notes Published in Bardwell's poetry collection Dostoevsky's Grave (Dedalus Press, 1991), the poem addresses the homecoming of a woman called Frances through the eyes of a child's traumatic memory. Frances is compared to a violent power like a German general who devoured her food as if it were Jews. The poet uses then the simile of 'racial memory' to describe Frances as well as the figure of Rumpelstiltskin that refers to the 1812 German fairytale by the Brothers Grimm.
Is bunachar beo é seo. Entries continue to be updated.