At the Recital

Word trickled down the aisle that he had died.
My first response: how did they even know?
Grief was an afterthought. He’d long been gone;
had only just sufficiently revived
to totter to his feet and say hello
(or else goodbye)”impossibly removed,
frail, struggling to sit or stand or speak.

The rumor rippled down my little row,
but soon the audience at the recital
recomposed itself. The music closed
like water over a floundering swimmer’s head,
filling the lacuna in the chair,
braiding an order in attentive air,
cleansing us of the news that he was dead.

Next
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

Worth Beyond Our Works

Leah Libresco Sargeant

In the future, everyone will know the grief of Garry Kasparov. The Russian grandmaster was bested by…

Beware the Benedict Bot

Nikolas Prassas

The words of a dead man / Are modified in the guts of the living.” Neither W.…

The Calculated Spectacle Behind Magnifica Humanitas

Raymond J. de Souza

The first encyclical letter of Pope Leo XIV has been engaged widely on its substance, but its…