My mother’s teeth were kept in a bottle
marked with the sign of the cross. I used
to shake it till they’d rattle,
interest and childish horror fused.
They weren’t her teeth. They were mine.
My brothers’ and my sisters’, too.
The one’s we’d shed, as sharks do,
pearls we’d surrendered to time,
white and pointed, little fence posts,
sharp as spearheads we would find
on battlefields full of ghosts
we’d scare up in our minds’ eyes.
We all lay claim to borrowed land.
The bottle fit in my small hand.
—Angela Alaimo O’Donnell
What We’ve Been Reading—Autumn 2025
First Things staff share their most recent autumn reading recommendations.
Walker Percy’s Pilgrimage
People can get used to most anything. Even the abyss may be rendered tolerable—or, for that matter,…
Outgrowing Nostalgia in The Ballad of Wallis Island
No man is an island,” John Donne declares in his Devotions upon Emergent Occasions. The Ballad of…