Childhood? Which childhood? 
The one that didn’t last? 
The one in which you learned to be afraid 
of the boarded-up well in the backyard 
and the ladder in the attic? 
The one presided over by armed men 
in ill-fitting uniforms 
strolling the streets and alleys, 
while loudspeakers declared a new era, 
and the house around you grew bigger, 
the rooms farther apart, with more and more 
people missing? 
The photographs whispered to each other 
from their frames in the hallway. 
The cooking pots said your name 
each time you walked past the kitchen. 
And you pretended to be dead with your sister 
in games of rescue and abandonment. 
You learned to lie still so long 
the world seemed a play you viewed from the muffled 
safety of a wing. Look! In 
run the servants screaming, the soldiers shouting, 
turning over the furniture, 
smashing your mother’s china. 
Don’t fall asleep. 
Each act opens with your mother 
reading a letter that makes her weep. 
Each act closes with your father fallen 
into the hands of Pharaoh. 
Which childhood? The one that never ends? O you, 
still a child, and slow to grow. 
Still talking to God and thinking the snow 
falling is the sound of God listening, 
and winter is the high-ceilinged house 
where God measures with one eye 
an ocean wave in octaves and minutes, 
and counts on many fingers 
all the ways a child learns to say Me. 
Which childhood? 
The one from which you’ll never escape? You, 
so slow to know 
what you know and don’t know. 
Still thinking you hear low song 
in the wind in the eaves, 
story in your breathing, 
grief in the heard dove at evening, 
and plentitude in the unseen bird 
tolling at morning. Still slow to tell 
memory from imagination, heaven 
from here and now, 
hell from here and now, 
death from childhood, and both of them 
from dreaming.


 



