The Child We Lost

La Dispute

    Continues after the ad

    There were shadows in the bedroom
    Where the light got thrown by the lamp on the nightstand
    On your mother’s side, after midnight, still
    You can see it all
    You can see it all
    And the closet in the corner
    On the far back shelf with the keepsakes, she hid
    That box there full of letters of regret
    By the pictures of the kids

    You get faint recollections of your mother’s sigh, countryside drive
    And the landscape seen from the window of the backseat with some flowers in a basket

    That afternoon after school you and your older sisters
    Found your parents in the kitchen at the table
    Father lifting off the lid of the box

    And a hush fell over everything like a funeral prayer
    A reverence, ancestral, heavy in the air

    Though you didn’t understand what it meant
    That they never said her name aloud around you
    Even sitting at the table with her things they’d kept
    You recall faintly cards, tiny clothes, and the smell of the paint in the upstairs bedroom
    Until then you didn’t know that’s what the box had held

    Your parents tiptoeing slowly around always speaking in code

    No, they never said her name aloud around you
    Only told you it was perfect where your sister went
    And you didn’t understand why it hurt them so much then that she’d come and left so soon
    Could only guess inside your head at what a “stillbirth” meant
    Only knew that mother wept

    Continues after the ad

    You watched while father held her, said “some things come but can’t stay here.”
    You saw a brightness
    Like a light through your eyes closed tight then she tumbled away.

    From here, some place
    To remain in the nighttime shadows she made
    To be an absence in mom, a sadness hanging over her
    Like some pentacostal flame, drifting on and off
    She was “sister,” only whispered.
    Sometimes “her” or
    “The child we lost.”

    You were visions
    A vagueness, a faded image
    You were visions

    You were a flame lit that burned out twice as brightly as the rest of us did
    When you left, you were light, then you tumbled away

    There are shadows that fall still here at a certain angle
    In the bedroom on the nightstand by your mother’s side
    From the light left on there

    There’s the box in the closet, all the things kept
    And the landscape where she left
    Flowers on the grave, marble where they etched that name
    And mother cried the whole way home

    But she never said it once out loud
    On the way back home from where you thought they meant
    When they said where sister went

    After grandpa got hospice sick and he couldn’t fall sleep
    They wheeled his stretcher bed beside her at night
    And I saw the light

    On the day that he died
    By their bed in grandma’s eyes
    While us grandkids said our goodbyes

    She said “don’t cry”
    Somewhere he holds her
    Said a name I didn’t recognize
    And the light with all the shadows combined

    Song details

    Composition:

    Did you see an error?

    Enviar revisão