People never believe me
when I tell them I recall
waking in my crib, lying watchful
while my parents dozed.
I slept there until I was two
in front of the window in their bedroom.
I remember watching the sun rise
amazed, lazy in my warm nest,
only the sound of breathing,
blood rush pulsing the words yes and yes.
Just as now I feel no need
to summon others at the moment
the miraculous occurs,
I couldn’t tell my parents then or later
that I saw God and angels and clouds
that became beliefs, most of all,
that silence was now
a cloak I would inhabit,
walk around inside
wearing it as beautiful silk
all my days.
From Rita Sims Quillen’s Some Notes You Hold (Madville 2020). Copyright 2020 Rita Simms Quillen.
I’m glad to hear it. As I say in the poem, I have been told it’s not possible to have such a vivid recollection of something from such a young age. But I know what I know.
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I remember such things too. Some of us do.
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