Parent/child relationship in ‘Somebody Else’s Baby’
by Ted Kooser-U.S. Poet Laureate, 2004-2006
Mar 12, 2009 | 478 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print


Though parents know that their children will grow up and away from them, will love and be loved by others, it’s a difficult thing to accept. Massachusetts poet Mary Jo Salter emphasizes the poignancy of the parent/child relationship in this perceptive and compelling poem.

Somebody Else’s Baby

From now on they always are, for years now

they always have been, but from now on you know

they are, they always will be,

from now on when they cry and you say

wryly to their mother, better you than me,

you’d better mean it, you’d better

hand over what you can’t have, and gracefully.

Reprinted from “New Letters,” vol. 72, no. 3-4, 2006, by permission of the poet. Copyright © 2006 by Mary Jo Salter, whose most recent book of poetry is “Open Shutters,” Knopf, 2003.
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