Motherland: A poem by Jellie N.Wyckelsma
In where I drew my
first breath I had no say,
Yet, deeply etched
into my heart, mind and my soul,
The place of my
birth will forever stay.
It was Nederland,
a small country in Europe along the North Sea;
With its own
customs and traditions, and its landscape
Of rivers, canals,
dykes and windmills as far as one can see.
The Dutch language
I spoke as a child instilled in my brain,
Will always be
there, even though in Australia
I must converse in
a tongue which to me is rather foreign.
When I write, the
Dutch and English grammars often fight.
In my head I still
count Een, Twee, en Drie, as I was taught,
Not One, Two and
Three, now the words are meant to be right.
In my garden are
roses, my Father used to grow.
When I stop and
smell them, I’m flooded with
Memories of
gardens I used to know.
The smell of some
foods take me back home too.
Nostalgia teases
my taste-buds, and I keep
The traditional
Dutch dishes on my daily menu.
Some days my
conscience asks me again and again,
‘Why did you
forsake your Motherland?
Were you too
young, adventurous, and not patriotic then?’
Time waits for no
one, and there is no going back for me.
Even if I did, the
homeland I left is no longer the same.
I’ll hang onto
memories, that in my mind I can still vividly see.
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