Sunday, May 12, 2019

Ellis Island - 1919

Today is Mother's Day. A while back I wrote a poem about my own mother's entry as a young immigrant into this country. It is in the form of a sestina where the end words of the first six lines repeat throughout the poem.

I can only hope she would have liked it. Happy Mother's Day, Mom.



Ellis Island - 1919


In her hand for luck a candy tin the shape
and size of a snuff box. In her Nordic blue
eyes wonder for Gustavino's vaulted ceiling,
capping the Great Hall. In her nose the scent
and sweat of people contained on crowded
ships now landed on America's front step,

Ellis Island. Lined up and directed to "Step
this way!" A doctor appraised her, felt the shape
of her twelve-year-old head, examined a crowd
of white teeth, approved her health with a blue
stamp. A man behind her, coughing blood, sent
back. To the wards? To the ship? TB sealing

his fate. In her ears echoing from the ceiling,
cacophony in a dozen languages, a step
away from chaos. Confusion when people sent
onward with new names. Mr. Duhamel reshaped
into Mr. Campbell. The Registrar misheard, blew
off their puzzled looks, inscribed lists crowded

with difficult names. Luggage vexed the crowds
jamming the floors, climbing to the ceiling.
A man of twenty tried to claim an untagged blue
steamer, listing its contents to an agent on the steps.
Identified it with shirts and socks, tried to shape
words to mark it his. Once opened, the scent

of mothballs erupted, and a forgotten accordion sent
a smile of recall across his face. Before the crowd
he picked up the instrument, played a polka, shaped
himself a future with others met under that ceiling,
broken English their common language, stepping
forward, ideas colored by the red, white and blue

promise of concerts to come. Cornflower blue
the color of her dress, hard-milled soap the scent
on her skin. Her father, here already, took the steps
by twos, searched for his family in the crowds.
Spying him, her laughter tickled the ceiling
as she settled quickly into his teddy-bear shape.

Two memories shaped her on Ellis Island: the blue-
lipped man with his scent of blood, and the crowd,
feet tapping to an accordion played under a grand ceiling.



Marilyn Aschoff Mellor

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