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Caribbean Poet Jacinth Howard, Domestic Abuse, motherhood, Poem “Undermining Eden” by Jacinth Howard, Poetry Collection The Mother Island (2023), St. Vincent & the Grenadines/Caribbean


Caribbean Poet Jacinth Howard with Front Cover of her Poetry Collection The Mother Island (2023)
Photo Credit: Barbados Today – March 18, 2025
My Poetry Corner May 2026 features the poem “Undermining Eden” from the debut poetry collection The Mother Island by writer, poet, and university professor Jacinth Howard, published by Brown Bird Publishing (2023). In 2020, the manuscript of this collection won the second prize at the Frank Collymore Literary Endowment Award competition. All excerpts of her poetry cited below are from this collection.
Born in the Caribbean Islands of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, the young Jacinth’s love for reading and literature led her to pursue English Literature at the tertiary level. She earned a BA (2014), MPhil (2017), and PhD (2020) in English Language and Literature/Letters from the University of the West Indies Cave Hill Campus, Barbados. She currently lives with her husband and two children in Barbados, where she teaches Literature at her alma mater.
In The Mother Island, Howard tells the stories of mothers who have lost a child, suffered domestic abuse, and were silenced because of the trauma. Her opening poem “Oya”—the African Yoruba goddess of the winds, lightning, and storms—is a testament to the strength of the woman (p. 5):
I used to think I had lost myself, / Engulfed in whistling gales. / Swept away, like hurricane come, […] Then in a single, silent moment, / I understood. […] I am the mother, dancing in the tempest. / I am the daughter, harmonizing with the torrent. / I am the woman, born of the storm.
“The Silenced Sister” speaks of the abused wife and mother, trapped in the lies of undying love and everchanging masks of her man, and unable to set herself free (verse 3 of 7, pp. 8-9):
Your heart is his, / At least it used to be. / Until he realized it wouldn’t stop beating. / So, he wouldn’t stop beating / Dragging Rapunzel by her rope of hair / Severing every escape route / Breaking your beauty inside and out / With love (on occasion) all throughout / So, you would never leave.
“Night Standard” tells the story of the tired, breast-feeding mother (p. 34):
It’s duty to keep a whole household in check. / And if all else fails, at least mother knows best. For all the hows and whys she lost herself / Are irrelevant in this milk sodden moment / When instead of milking reasons to shout / A sleepy child looks up at her, milky-white-mouthed / Pink lids half-closed, he’s unconcerned about / Whether mothers need rest to run too.
The featured poem, “Undermining Eden” (p. 12) addresses the condition of the woman in Judeo-Christian patriarchal societies which teach that Eve was responsible for the first couple’s expulsion from the Garden of Eden.
They say it was a woman,
Who undermined Eden.
Performed the first trade of human bodies.
Permanently expelled from paradise:
For glowing, green eyes and power lust.
Still in effect post life sentence.
Despite the virgin’s painful sacrifice
To redeem mankind,
Woman is still paying plenty.
While Eve is not named in the poem, reference is made to Lilith, a primordial female demon found in Mesopotamian and Jewish mythology. Whether the dissident was Eve or Lilith, her penalties for disobeying or defying the male deity all relate to motherhood: pain in giving birth and loss due to miscarriage and stillbirth.
Multiplied sorrow, responsibility
Believed to be brought on
As Lilithian penalty
All meeting at the midpoint
Of an acute angle cuing kicks in the gut:
Issuing broken, disappointed cries
Scarlet signals, Mother Nature arrives
An exclamation: single, red-lined test
An exhalation of babes fatherless, bereft
The howling effects of infantile hauntings,
Another miscarriage that nobody’s counting.
It’s a life sentence for the woman; passed on from one generation to the next, throughout the ages. No redemption. Not even the sacrifice of the Virgin Mary, mother of Jesus, made any difference. But the joy of motherhood overrides the pain, sorrow, and responsibilities.
To read the complete featured poem “Undermining Eden” and learn more about the work of Caribbean poet Jacinth Howard, go to my Poetry Corner May 2026.
Very powerful poetry
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Thanks very much, Derrick.
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It is a wonderful selection of poems, Empowering.
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Thanks very much, Diana. Glad you like Howard’s poetry.
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She is welcome.
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Jacinth Howard is a great/socially conscious poet, Rosaliene! And the “Undermining Eden” title is brilliant.
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I agree, Dave, the title is brilliant. It begs the question: Who’s undermining Eden in our times?
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She writes with great power Rosaliene. Mothers are underappreciated all around the world and it should not be happening. Have a good Sunday. Allan
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Allan, I’m so glad that you see the power in Howard’s poetry. The under-appreciation of mothers is evident from the moment of conception. According to data released by the World Health Organization in April 2025, about 260,000 women died during and following pregnancy and childbirth in 2023.
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A fabulous post, Rosaliene. What a wonderful poet Jacinth Howard is…and you Rosaliene, for highlighting her here!
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Thanks very much, Ashley. My pleasure in sharing her work 🙂
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The mention of how religion is used and misused could not be more timely. There is always a reason to condemn, control, and enslave the other. Tragic. Thank you.
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Tragic, indeed, Dr. Stein. In her poem, “Pouis and Autocracy,” Howard writes:
An empire, / tended by fear, / will never produce, / healthy, loving citizens. / Icy, imperial thumbs, / plucking up bright flowers by the neck, along with the weeds, / will never foster flourishing results.
*Poui trees are well-known across the Caribbean for their yellow and pink blossoms.
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Ah, pain doled out as a justification for women’s sins, as though one action could affect the many, as though it became the overarching reason for men hating women and for their domestic violence. Patriarchy lives to punish women, and absolve men.
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Tamara, this is tragically true for women in the USA and worldwide. It’s so easy for one to blame the other for one’s own weakness. Violence and war offer neither absolution for the perpetrators nor the restoration of Eden.
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So true Rosaliene, so very true!
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What a truly wonderful post, Rosaliene. Jacinth Howard is an incredibly gifted poet, and how lovely it is that you took the time to shine a light on her work and bring it to so many more hearts.
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Thanks very much, Ravindra.
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Thanks for helping us understand this important poet, Rosaliene. How will we women and/or mothers free ourselves from Patriarchal madness?
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My pleasure in sharing Howard’s work, Mara. Howard addresses that same question in the closing lines of the poem “Undermining Eden.” She’s not willing to risk being cast out again from Eden by believing in more serpentine lies / of becoming gods. Across the ages and up to the present, the men and women who continue to buy this lie enable the male madness of acting like gods.
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Right! She exposes the big lie. Men are far from gods. Women are probably closer. 🙂
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😀
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Gosh, you do find such tortured souls, but thanks for once again reminding us of the healing power of poetry.
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Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Ilsa. I would not describe Dr. Howard as a tortured soul. Rather, she uses her poetry and other writing to give voice to tortured women in her community.
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A poet who ISN’T a tortured soul? Unheard of! 😉
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Jacinth Howard summarizes the history and psychology of women with deep insight and compassion. In spite of so much sad reality, we persevere, seeking wisdom and grace. Will we ever build enough courage to overcome the unjustly imposed dis-grace?
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She does, indeed, JoAnna. Not only have we persevered, but have also grown stronger in overcoming the “unjustly imposed dis-grace.” As I see it, it would take more than courage to right this injustice. It would require finding our way back to Eden.
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Good point. Finding our way back to the best of Eden is a great goal for humanity.
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Jacinth Howard goes to the heart with her deeply moving poetry. You find excellent poets, Rosaliene. Thank you for sharing them with us.
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So glad you appreciate her work, Mary. My pleasure in sharing 🙂
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Thanks for sharing the profound deep work of a woman who knows how to deliver profound and utterly gut punching poetry that brings you to the ground to think, Rosaliene. Jacinth Howard is a gifted poet. 💗
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My pleasure in sharing, Cindy. I’m so glad that you find Howard’s poetry gut punching and thought-provoking. It’s her way of giving a voice to women and mothers who suffer domestic and other abuses.
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Absolutely, and I sure did love it and it’s so important it’s shared💕
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Wonderful poem! Thank you for introducing Jacinth Howard to us.
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My pleasure in sharing, Edward. So glad you like my choice 🙂
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A beautiful tribute to poetry that explores the pain, strength, and memory of women.
Thank you for sharing this.
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My pleasure in sharing, Melie. Thanks for dropping by and adding your thoughts 🙂
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Thank you for sharing your thoughts as well 🙂
I really enjoyed reading your article.
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Melie, I appreciate that you enjoyed reading my article 🙂 ❤
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It’s totally deserved. 🙂
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What powerful and disturbing poetry. Undermining Eden summed it up for me. I’ve often thought how sad The Forbidden Tree of Knowledge is. What human wouldn’t want knowledge? And what God would think up such a mean idea as forbidding it?
Sigh….
Julie
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Great questions, Julie. Perhaps, the gods knew that their creation had not yet achieved the necessary wisdom and moral compass to deal with such knowledge. Interestingly, humanity is once again at such a crucial point with the development of Artificial Intelligence (AI) that puts all of humanity’s knowledge at our fingertips. Will the female be blamed this time if our creation leads to humanity’s extinction?
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Sadly, I think I can guess the answer to your question….
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Howard speaks so powerfully of such important issues that affect women. Thanks for introducing me to her poetry.
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She sure does, Rebecca. My pleasure in sharing her work.
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