Gwendolyn Brooks

When You Have Forgotten Sunday: the Love Story

When You Have Forgotten Sunday: the Love Story - meaning Summary

Domestic Memory and Intimacy

The speaker inventories small domestic rituals—shared Sundays, simple meals, bedroom tenderness and wartime anxieties—as the evidence of an intimate relationship. The poem argues that only by forgetting these ordinary, specific moments can the addressee truly be said to have forgotten the speaker. Memory here functions as the test of love: quotidian detail and shared vulnerability are what sustain and prove the bond.

Read Complete Analyses

And when you have forgotten the bright bedclothes on a Wednesday and a Saturday, And most especially when you have forgotten Sunday— When you have forgotten Sunday halves in bed, Or me sitting on the front-room radiator in the limping afternoon Looking off down the long street To nowhere, Hugged by my plain old wrapper of no-expectation And nothing-I-have-to-do and I’m-happy-why? And if-Monday-never-had-to-come— When you have forgotten that, I say, And how you swore, if somebody beeped the bell, And how my heart played hopscotch if the telephone rang; And how we finally went in to Sunday dinner, That is to say, went across the front room floor to the ink-spotted table in the southwest corner To Sunday dinner, which was always chicken and noodles Or chicken and rice And salad and rye bread and tea And chocolate chip cookies— I say, when you have forgotten that, When you have forgotten my little presentiment That the war would be over before they got to you; And how we finally undressed and whipped out the light and flowed into bed, And lay loose-limbed for a moment in the week-end Bright bedclothes, Then gently folded into each other— When you have, I say, forgotten all that, Then you may tell, Then I may believe You have forgotten me well.

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