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Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer: The Grand Quilt

I don’t believe we can stitch together

only scraps of beauty, squares of light.

I don’t believe in a quilt that doesn’t also 

have patches of sorrow, blocks of ache. 

Such pieces are, of course, much harder

to want to stitch in. But it matters

that we do not exclude them.

It matters that we don’t pretend 

they do not exist. 

It matters that we sew every piece

into the grand cloth.

Now I know it matters

how we sew these pieces in, 

perhaps using our finest silk thread,

perhaps with an elaborate stitch 

our grandmother taught us, 

or perhaps we must use 

a stitch we make up

because no one ever taught us

how to do this most difficult task—

to meet what at first seems unwanted

and to incorporate it into the whole

knowing everything depends on this. 


Copyright 2024 Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer is a poet, teacher and storyteller. Her many books and recordings include All the Honey (Samara Press, 2023). She lives with her husband and daughter in Placerville, Colorado, on the banks of the wild and undammed San Miguel River.


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15 comments on “Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer: The Grand Quilt

  1. jimmy pappas
    May 14, 2024
    jimmy pappas's avatar

    You have expressed an important truth about life once again, Rosemerry. I remember my maternal grandmother used to take old socks and tie them into a rug. They were always beautiful.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Vox Populi
      May 15, 2024
      Vox Populi's avatar

      Lovely image, Jimmy. Thank you!

      >

      Like

    • Rosemerry
      May 16, 2024
      Rosemerry's avatar

      all these ways of honoring the humble, finding connections, creating beauty of the unexpected 😉

      Like

  2. jimmy pappas
    May 14, 2024
    jimmy pappas's avatar

    You have expressed an important truth about life once again, Rosemerry. I remember my maternal grandmother used to take old socks and tie them into a rug. They were always beautiful.

    Like

  3. Lisa Zimmerman
    May 13, 2024
    Lisa Zimmerman's avatar

    This reminds me of an image from a Judson Mitcham poem which I’ll have to find. Just beautiful, Rosemerry❤️

    Liked by 2 people

  4. laureannebosselaar
    May 13, 2024
    Laure-Anne Bosselaar's avatar

    This poem is a quilt of emotions and imagery — so deftly sewn together. Bravo.

    Liked by 3 people

  5. Barbara Huntington
    May 13, 2024
    Barbara Huntington's avatar

    Never learned to quilt, but the patches of my life fit all the requirements: happy, sad, frustration, disappointment. My dear friend who moved to Missouri sent me a quilt that echoed my life, the kids and dogs, sunflowers, comfort amidst stroke, and plague, cancer and now heart from cancer’s cure. For Mother’s Day my son gave me a photo book of our trip to Colombia, comforting patchwork remembrance.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. Sean Sexton
    May 13, 2024
    Sean Sexton's avatar

    wonderful poem Rosemary! I had a grandmother that did crewel embroidery on squares she fashioned into rugs for each of her grandchildren (and there were many of us!). She let me draw a design for the one she made for me, as I’m also an artist. She believed people needed and should always have (aside from the normal course of their days), “things they could do with their hands.”

    The “Caswell Carpet” at the Met was her “mountaintop” of aspiration in that medium as she’d visited it many times throughout her life.

    Liked by 2 people

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