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Jude the Obscure
My daughter Lea is my friend
so I called her last night. We talked
a long time about what she wants.
A good marriage, a better job,
a baby before the window
of youth closes. She remembers
her house in Botswana.
Two hours on a crowded bus
to buy food at Bush Baby Calls
in Maun. She got robbed twice.
Later, her pet goat Bantlé
ate the Baobab in her yard.
I told her I had another family
before she was born. Two stepchildren.
I sometimes wonder what became
of them, whether they survived me.
Lea sometimes wonders what became of Bantlé.
He probably ended up in a stew, she said.
The sunrise in our garden is really something
I said, changing the subject. It really is
she said, remembering the last time
she was here. And now
standing on the patio in late summer
I wish Lea could see this light
lowering itself gently into the arms
of the Aphrodite sweet shrub
and tangling itself in the thorns
of Jude the Obscure named for
the many petals of our sins against others.
Echinacea are holding their last blossoms,
songbirds are praising the new day,
and the tenacious morning glory
is surviving uninvited, but not alone
~
Forgiveness
Our garden has survived
the warmest summer since the Pliocene.
I tell friends Eva is in charge of beauty
while I’m in charge of digging holes.
They think I’m joking, but I enjoy
breaking through the gray clay
of this ancient mountain
to reveal darkness where something–
earthworms, mycelia, nematodes —
is supposed to be alive but isn’t.
These days digging down
I don’t feel resentment anymore.
I’ve forgiven everyone, even myself.
Years ago I let go of my father
who confused money with virtue
and died broke, full of regret,
saying I’m sorry I’m sorry
because forgiveness wasn’t enough.
He came late to understand
we don’t get what we want,
we don’t get what we need,
we get what we get. What’s done
is done. No do-overs. I’ve tried to be
a better father than my father
but maybe I’ve failed. The jury
of my past selves can’t arrive
at a decision in the dark.
~~~~

Michael Simms is the founding editor of Vox Populi. His speculative novels include The Blessed Isle (Madville 2023, 2024, 2025) and his poetry collections include Strange Meadowlark and Jubal Rising (Ragged Sky 2023, 2025).
Copyright 2025. These poems first appeared in a special section of European Poetry, edited by Helen Pletts.
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Dear Michael,I found these poems after looking for other poems – isn’t that something, how that works? – and I took both in after talking with my son, miles across the ocean, homesick and lonely, while typing in his bedroom.The poignancy of these poems together went whoosh, right into my heart. Oh, the tenderness of love and parenthood, of forgiveness and repair.I wonder if you’ve heard these words from Bayo Akomolafe? They came to mind while reading your poems:”Your life’s work is an intergenerational project, an ancestral conspiracy, a continuous meeting of bodies, a queering of temporality. Your life is not yours to resolve, yours to complete, or yours to contain. You will not finally be decolonized; you will not finally be enlightened; you will not finally be ‘good’ – no matter how conscientious, aware, ‘woke’ or alive you are. It is because your life is necessarily the life of the many – blessed with shadows, inner workings, sedimentation, ruptures, departures, arrivals, and frayed edges. Be thankful for the threadbare places of your life, for it gives the many who are yet to come something to stitch theirs with.”- Bayo Akomolafe
Thank you for your regenerative words.
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Oh my, Karly. I am so honored by your words. The quotation from Bayo Akomalafe is new to me and so moving and profound. Thank you!!!!!
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You are very welcome, Michael. I believe I found Bayo’s words in one of his articles on his website, and they have continued to feed me.
Year by year life teaches me to welcome the threadbare places of my life, and the threadbare places of the ones who came before me. What a thought – that these threadbare places could be one of the inheritances I leave my loved ones, along with my love. And that my ancestors’ threadbare places are a part of their love, too. I think poetry is fertile ground for this kind of stitching!
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Beautifully said, Karly. Thank you.
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Something in the air tonight made me go seeking Michael’s gut-level honest poetry. Is it because of how complex the world has become, how disingenuous people are? Because I needed some truth-telling about the human condition apart from the political landscape? I don’t know – I only know it helped soothe me. Thanks for being here.
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Thanks, Patricia. Your generous comment means a great deal to me.
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A power duo, Michael. ❤️💔
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Thanks, Lisa!
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Oh, these two together. Wow. There is something so much more beautiful and profound about this conversation with a daughter after reading
“I’ve tried to bea better father than my fatherbut maybe I’ve failed.”
And oh, this exploration of what we tend, what survives, what finds a way to grow, and this ongoing practice of forgiving ourselves, each other, the world …
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Thank you, Rosemerry. This is a very generous thing for you to say.
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Ditto, Rosemerry’s comments. Love these two poems together, Michael.
The second poem suggests a failure that the first poem refutes. Breathe easy…
Also, I’m sorry your dad was so mistaken about virtue. And, about his struggle to receive fully in life the gifts of self-forgiveness and unconditional love. I pray for your family that all generational curses are broken and that, no matter what happens, each of you thrives.
Lastly, these poems made me remember many little ways in which I’ve failed, wrongs that, by now, no one but I remembers. I prayed the morning I first read your poems for forgiveness for these things and have been feeling new freedom since. Thanks so much! Rock on!
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What a lovely and generous response, Desne. Thank you.
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Michael, I’m about to leave
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Where are you going, Laurie?
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Michael— so sorry. My message got cut off. I was just saying that I was/am about to leave to give a reading tonight and needed inspiration— which I got from your beautiful poems. So thank you!!!!
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Thank you, Laurie. I thought you meant you were leaving the country — which is something I think about often.
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These poems move me so, so deeply. Thank you, thank you, Michael!
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Oh, thank you, Meg. I love your poems as well.
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These are such gorgeous poems, Michael. Linda
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Thank you, Linda!
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These two are as beautiful as they are treacherous and tenacious, well dug by the digger of holes! To not feel resentment anymore—a profound goal. The voice is knowing, friendly, deep. A garden well tended.
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Thank you, Adam!
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I followed your poems. Things are changing. From concentrating on your inner self to concentrating on the world of things, stones and plants.Now the familial narrative is showing up but it is clean, no Freudian crimes or struggle. Relations are pure as to say the humans reflect closely innocent nature.
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Thank you, Saleh. I admire you so much. Your praise is like gold in the air between us.
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michael, thank you. i read these poems early in the Easter dawn and welcome their light. sublime as was said and i repeat. goat stew to make me laugh, tenderness to make me dream of fathers that can and could…a bow to read that you were such a one… these poems touch a raw nerve in their brave simplicity. thank you for them.
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Thank you, Margo. I admire your ecstatic imagination.
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We get what we get.
So profoundly true.
Thank you for your gift of vox populi in my email.
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Thank you for your time and attention, Lori.
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Exquisite. Exquisite.
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Thank you, Councilman. My deepest respect for your service.
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Thank you, Councilman. My deepest respect for your service.
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Perfect poems for today. Regret and blame rule and destroy some lives. If we can accept “it is what it is” in our personal lives and forgive we can then appreciate and smile at bird song and the glow and beauty of Jude the Obscure. I’ve got to buy one of those!
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Thanks as always, Leo…
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Those poems are in such deeply human conversation with each other — those questions, those doubts, those moments of love and vulnerability so important to me right now. I’m grateful for them, glad you brought them to us together. A togetherness that — just like these poems — makes us, your readers, stronger and more hopeful by their openness & universality.
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Oh, thank you, Laure-Anne. I admire your poems so much.
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Strong, vivid, and touching! Reveal what parents feel about the relationship with their children. “I’ve tried to be / a better father than my father.”–Like this line.
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Thank you, John. I admire your poems as well.
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I love this! Poignant description of “parent guilt” that crops up in every parent. Congratulations at least 40 times for weathering the storms of life and finding joy and forgiveness in spite of them. I am in awe of your accomplishments and insights, and forever grateful happenstance brought us to the same place at the same time. U considering reading your poetry a privilege.
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Thank you! You are very kind to say so.
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Oh Michael, you have captured the joys and pains of parenting, especially ‘no do-overs’. We just each try our best to love in our own imperfect ways. Thank you for these touching poems.
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Thank you, Jan. We’ve been online friends for a long time, and I’ve always appreciated your comments and encouragement.
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Thank you Michael, a mutual appreciation.
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Such moving and wonderful poems. I so identify with all of this.
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Thanks, Donna. Love your work.
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And I love yours!
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Each poem in its own right powerful, poignant, and absolutely beautifully crafted. I shrugged my shoulders with Lea and tried to forgive myself as a not perfect parent. But apart from that I just admired the writing. I am taking this very much with me: “The jury
of my past selves can’t arrive / at a decision in the dark.”
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Thank you, Rose Mary. I appreciate your poems and comments here.
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Is that every parent’s fear, “What’s done
is done. No do-overs. I’ve tried to be
a better father than my father
but maybe I’ve failed.“ and I’ve tried to be a good citizen, voted in every election, stood up for the disenfranchised and what is done is done and why didn’t it make a difference for family or country? Pain is universal and suffering does not feel optional.
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(And thank you for the poems)
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Life is suffering. Also it is joy and love.
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Beautiful poems, Michael. As always.
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Thank you, Stephanie, my good friend.
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Powerful metaphors lift both these poems from the ordinary to a literary intimacy with a daughter, a family, and through them your readers. They become a pair of texts with extraordinary vision of what’s deep and real, in some ways transcendent, and for me redemptive.
And as an old friend, a biologist, once remarked: all praise to the nematodes.
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OMG Jim: Those nematodes! They’re still gonna be here after the asteroids have come and gone!
indomitable!
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I love nematodes. We wouldn’t last long without them.
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I really enjoyed these Michael–the accepted sorrow, the accepted past that cannot be changed, and the Stones ringing behind the second poem–we certainly don’t always get what we want or need.
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As I read these two fine poems of Michael’s I thought of your words in the book FInding the World’s Fulness. Both Words of Power, and metaphors to live in came to mind as I finished each poem here. Thanks for that wonderful book, btw. My copy is now a mess of underlinings.
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Thanks so much for your words. That book meant a lot to me,
Bob
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Finding the World’s Fullness, not Fulness. hehe
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Thanks, Bob. So glad you’ve joined our VP community.
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So deep, beautiful and stirring. Each piece on its own, together sublime.
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Sublime…? wow, thank you!
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Michael:
What perfect timing these poems arrive and provide something so consoling and retrospective to my soul. This is whole life arriving in time in our broken, disjunctive world that leaves me speechless. Even if the goat wound up in a stew, and even if our fathers are gone and what we’ve gotten is what we got, the three poems give me an essential consolation about what has happened and what is to be next. Thankyou. They are exactly what I needed between the day of darkness, and tomorrow’s blinding light.
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Beautifully said, Sean! I’m honored that a poet of your skill and inspiration would praise my work. Thank you!
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