Sunday and we’re at church
You’re wearing that cotton dress
I’ve seen
in my earliest memory
the fuchsia one with the
bulbous flowers
There’s dried food on it
& I doubt you’re aware
& I say nothing
You’re wearing your yard slippers
Likewise, I say nothing
Think of the breaking of the shell
we call
self
Over the year to come
fresh crevices will reshape
the landscape of your eyes
Mommy will watch them
form
I’ll be away
in Oxford
making life
Right now your mind
settles in the church
familiar
Thirty years ago you and I
were already here
This is what I know –
like flowing water
no beginning or end
You enter the past
a fragile whisper
∞
∞
Jason Allen-Paisant is a Jamaican-born, UK-based poet. He graduated from the University of Oxford in 2015 with a DPhil in Medieval and Modern Languages and joined the University of Leeds in 2016 as a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow and now serves as the Director of the Institute for Colonial and Postcolonial Studies. His debut poetry collection, Thinking with Trees, was published in June 2021 by Carcanet Press and named by The Irish Times as one of the Best Poetry Books of 2021.
Amazing!