The young couple across the cul-de-sac from us have just had their third child, a son this time. The neighborhood has always been rich in children. When we moved in fourteen years ago, sixteen kids lived here in the street’s nine houses. Twelve of them were boys. Now there are seventeen kids, even with our three sons living in Maryland, Peru and Westchester County. None of the current crop appears to be a delinquent. They’re noisy, of course, and forever riding bicycles and scooters. One kid even has an e-bike. I had forgotten that children always run if they have a choice in the matter, and yelling is the language they speak.
We hear the fertility
rate in the United States – the number of children born to women of
childbearing years – reached a record low in 2024 and dropped even lower last
year. I don’t claim to understand the economics or sociology of this trend. It
just seems sad. Children are difficult and exhausting but they make everything
worthwhile. When you have a child, you’re forced to relinquish your fiercely
held self-centeredness and live for another being. You have something you
would gladly give up your own life to keep safe.
Yvor Winters and his wife,
the poet/novelist Janet Lewis, had a son and a daughter. Winters concludes his poem “A
Prayer for My Son” with these lines:
“Eternal Spirit, you
Who guided Socrates,
Pity this small and new
Bright soul on hands and
knees.”
Daniel Mark Epstein
published another blessing poem, “Caesarean,” in the Winter 1998 issue of The
American Scholar. Note the final three lines:
“Startled from ancient
sleep in a dark house
By crashing walls, harsh
torches, strangers
Dragging him naked through
his mother's blood,
No hero would stand up to
the invaders
With such intrinsic
dignity as you showed
This morning, the first
day of your life.
At the shock of air you
cried out loud
In sight of a new world
and a world lost.
Then you were quiet,
curious, engrossed,
Blue eyes half-open
bearing a ripple of light
From that primordial ocean
cast asunder.
May your vision never
weary of the sight
Of this strange country
and our stranger ways;
And may the days be worthy of your wonder.”

