He drags the bow,
Steady, strong, and slow,
To its freedom.
And in the air, silence.
There are, maybe, one hundred souls
Sitting together in a long quiet
Before the shredding storm of song,
The hairs from some magnificent horse,
Breaking free, too. They linger, they long
To dance, eyes closed,
Raptured to a heaven,
The songs of suffering angels,
The way he sings the cello,
Transformed
To its ways, its sways,
Its dangerous foreboding,
Its celebration,
Its redemption.
—-
Six Months Later:
—-
I still find delight
In the memory of wine, music,
That candlelit night
Under a rumbling train,
Where we released our hopes to soar,
and even our mutual pain, with song;
Captured, for a moment, then gone.
Like fallen angels, we fell,
To a silent night, a silent world,
Perhaps, indistinguishable from hell,
Except in those rare moments.