Mother's Hands

Strong enough to lift me
each time I couldn't rise. Soft
as cotton wool, washing
dirt from scrapes and tears
from eyes. Firm enough
to model clay
and boys, to bowls
and men, yet fine
when stroking ivory keys--
Für Elise and Clair de Lune.
They'd curl through each long evening
around her only vice, in a holder
like Audrey's, that never left her side.
I'm thinking of her hands now--
strong and wild and free; missing
her hands now, as I watch ashes
blow to sea.

Ryan Stone

First published in the Ekphrastic Review, September 2016