|
This boy, of course, was dead, whatever that |
might mean. And nobly dead. I think we should feel |
he was nobly dead. He fell in battle, perhaps, |
and this carved stone remembers him |
not as he may have looked, but as if to define |
the naked virtue the stone describes as his. |
One foot is forward, the eyes look out, the arms |
drop downward past the narrow waist to hands |
hanging in burdenless fullness by the heavy flanks. |
The boy was dead, and the stone smiles in his death |
lightening the lips with the pleasure of something achieved: |
an end. To come to an end. To come to death |
as an end. And coming, bring there intact, the full |
weight of his strength and virtue, the prize with which |
his empty hands are full. None of it lost, |
safe home, and smile at the end achieved. |
Now death, of which nothing as yet - or ever - is known, |
leaves us alone to think as we want of it, |
and accepts our choice, shaping the life to the death. |
Do we want an end? It gives us; and takes what we give |
and keeps it; and has, this way, in life itself, |
a kind of treasure house of comely form |
achieved and left with death to stay and be |
forever beautiful and whole, as if |
to want too much the perfect, unbroken form |
were the same as wanting death, as choosing death |
for an end. There are other ways; we know the way |
to make the other choice for death: unformed |
or broken, less than whole, puzzled, we live |
in a formless world. Endless, we hope for no end. |
I tell you, death, expect no smile of pride |
from me. I bring you nothing in my empty hands. |