Sunday, January 21, 2018

Because You Gotta Have Faith


In the words of the late pop star George Michael, who died a few days after Anthony, you "gotta have faith".  If you listen to the lyrics you will quickly find that he is referring to love, not to God.  But maybe there is more to it.  There are many references to God and love in the Bible.  Perhaps the most well-known or the one that sums it up best is 1 John 4:8 - "Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love".  God is love.  Think about it.  

Faith is a touchy topic, one that seems to be a lightning rod that divides individuals and families and nations and continents.  When it comes down to it, you either have it or you don't.  You cannot have just a little; you are either in or you are out.  
I have always been a person of faith.  I was not raised to be particularly religious and we were not in the front pew every Sunday at church. I went to Sunday school sometimes.  We were in the congregation for important religious holidays and at other times.  As a child prayer was always present at bedtime and before family meals.  It was just a part of life that seemed a given.  As an adult, prayer continued to be a part of the routine, one that Anthony and I taught to the kids.  He was raised much like me, where religion was a part of life but attendance at church every Sunday did not determine if you were a good Christian or not.    

When tragedy happens, it is excruciatingly hard to have faith.  It seems impossible to believe that there is a reason and a bigger picture.  The loneliness is overwhelming and it feels as though a weight lies on your chest at all times.  Sometimes the weight threatens to crush you.  Hope seems non-existent.  It is easy to question your purpose for living.  Everything you worked so hard for no longer seems important.  Everything you thought was important suddenly is not important at all.  And you feel completely lost, like all of the light has gone from the world.  

He died on December 21st.  We still went to church on Christmas Eve just as we did every year prior.  Maybe it was about tradition or maybe I was seeking something I was never going to find.  But this time it felt like an insult to see so many people smiling, families filled with joy while mine was irretrievably broken.  The words of the minister seemed empty and even cruel.  After that we did not go back to church for months.  In that time I did not pray much.  I felt utterly alone but I leaned on my friends for help and I hugged my children more tightly.  I longed for some kind of sign to give me hope.

One of my Golden Girls is a regular attendee at the largest church in town, along with her husband and two kids.  She told me how much she liked going there.  Like me, she had been raised in the Methodist church.  Also like me, traditional church was not really speaking to her or inspiring her.  She encouraged me to attend a service with her.  At first I resisted because this particular place seemed so foreign to what I knew of church.  The mass of buildings and people were intimidating to me.  I could not imagine anything other than the traditional services I was accustomed to.  But I went with her because I needed something different and I needed to face my faith head-on.

That first service was completely out of my comfort zone and I thought I might not return.  But my daughter loved the service geared toward kids her age and I went back again for her sake, glad that she was benefiting.  We began attending regularly over the summer, only skipping services when my friend was out of town.  The thought of going on my own was too much but I live streamed the service at home.  My son has attended a few times with us, as well.  

Along the way something happened to me.  The sermons started to resonate.  I started to look forward to Sunday mornings, interested in what the message would be.  I started to feel less alone.  I started to feel some acceptance and peace.  I started to re-find my faith. And I started to have some hope that somehow I will make sense of everything.  

In the fall I took a class on grief, alongside those who have walked in similar shoes.  That was an intense experience, two hour sessions each Wednesday for twelve weeks.  I could not say that I looked forward to going each week, because I knew it would be painful.  There were many other widows in the class and we definitely formed a bond.  It was incredibly helpful to know that they understood what I had been through.  And yet none of them became a widow while in their 40s with children still to raise, aging parents and a full-time job obligation.  So as much as I appreciated their friendship and support (and continue to), I was still alone.  A recurring theme. 

The class ended in mid-November just in time to prepare for the holidays.  Whereas last year through Christmas and New Year's I was numb, this year I seemed to feel everything for the first time.  And it was hard. Hosting a meal without help cleaning, setting up or cooking. Smiling and pretending to be happy because everyone else is.  Hoping no one mentions his name and the lack of his presence, then wondering why no one mentioned his name or the lack of his presence.  Putting one less place setting on the table and seeing someone else sitting in his normal chair. No more making his favorite holiday dishes.  No more conspiring on what to get the kids for Christmas and then going shopping.  No more inside jokes about putting up the tree and the lights.  No more playing Santa together.  No more holiday parties together.  No more watching together as faces light up when stockings are emptied or gifts are opened.    

I continue to view this experience as a journey with a destination unknown.  Each day is a new learning experience and the opportunity to become just a little bit wiser.  My perspective is completely different than it once was, for the better.  I no longer take anything for granted.

I have learned one thing that takes priority over all others.  That is, life is ultimately out of our control.  We foolishly believe that our choices and plans and dreams are completely our own.  In the end though, everything is in God's hands.  Everything.  So you gotta have faith.

When Anthony and I got married, the ceremony included the usual reading from 1 Corinthians about love.  It also included one of the most famous poems in existence dedicated to love.  The words are beautiful but in my case they are also prophetic.  Why? God is love.


How Do I Love Thee?

By 
How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.
I love thee to the depth and breadth and height
My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight
For the ends of Being and ideal Grace.
I love thee to the level of every day's
Most quiet need, by sun and candlelight.
I love thee freely, as men strive for Right;
I love thee purely, as they turn from Praise.
I love with a passion put to use
In my old griefs, and with my childhood's faith.
I love thee with a love I seemed to lose
With my lost saints, I love thee with the breath,
Smiles, tears, of all my life! and, if God choose,
I shall but love thee better after death.

With photo credits to my amazing Kate


Friday, January 12, 2018

Thank You for Being a Friend





This is a love letter, the kind that few people may have occasion to write in their lifetime.

We come into contact with many different people in our lives.  Who knows what the magic formula is for forming friendships?  First the chance meeting, then the suggestion to meet again and by that third or fourth meeting you pretty much know if the friendship is going anywhere.  Kind of like what I remember about dating from 25 years ago.  (Is it still like that?)

I have been fortunate to have many friends in my life.  Some of whom I have maintained a close friendship with since childhood or college, some of whom I was once very close to and now do not communicate with often or at all.  But each friendship, whether for a lifetime or just a season, helped shape the person I am today.

In 2010 I was one of 30 people selected for the Chamber of Commerce Leadership Columbia program.  I knew no one else in the class but ended up hitting it off with the woman seated next to me at our retreat.  Over time, we became close with another classmate and then eventually with one of the co-chairs.  

Lunch dates followed for the four of us and in 2012 we were all selected to a program called the Greater Missouri Leadership Challenge, a year-long symposium with four sessions dedicated to informing us of the challenges and opportunities faced by our state and how we could effect change.  That was a great time – four different three day periods where we learned how we could better our community but also a time when we carpooled, shared adjoining rooms and meals, and enjoyed being together.  Just the type of fun good friends should have with each other.

The four of us are so different – background, education, interests, professions, personality types.  But we made each other laugh.  Not chuckles but full-on spells of loud, convulsive, tear-inducing, sides hurting, can’t-stop-it-even-if-we-tried laughter.  It just simply felt good and right when we were together.  Each of us could completely be our authentic selves and know we could bring any issue to the table without being judged but with full support and the offer of help from the others.  We were unlikely friends from the beginning.  In hindsight, I believe we were brought into each other’s lives for a reason that we did not yet know.

None of us can remember the date of the lunch meeting that would change everything.  It started like any other, catching up on our personal and professional lives, the ever present laughter.  And none of us can remember who said it but the comment was made that if something happened to our husbands as we got older we could move in together like the Golden Girls from the popular TV series.  It seemed we each naturally fit the personality of one of the four characters.  Shelly was the sweet, lovable but slightly naive-in-the-best-kind-of-way Rose; Sarah was the tall, smart, take-charge Dorothy; Michele was the go-with-the-flow Blanche who gave us an education about life and men every time we met; and me, Sophia, the oldest who was known for being strong-willed, sarcastic and witty.

We began to refer to ourselves as the Golden Girls and gained a bit of a following on social media.  Holiday gifts began to take on a Golden Girls theme.  Other women told us they wished they were part of our circle.  And we grew stronger as a unit of friends.  I think we began to realize at that time that ours was a special friendship, one unlike what most people had.     

On that terrible day, we were supposed to have lunch and exchange Christmas gifts.  I had so looked forward to spending time with them, because it is difficult for us to find time on the calendar when all four of us are available.  There was no lunch meeting on that day but the four of us did end up together after all.  

Michele was the first call I made upon leaving my office.  She answered in her typically sunny way but immediately knew that something was wrong.  When I told her what had happened, she asked if I needed her to come with me to the farm and I told her no.  I did not know what I needed at that point and honestly would have no idea for days to come.   But she came anyway and brought Shelly along with her.  In their calm, cool and capable manner they just began doing things for us, anticipating what they thought we needed and then acting.  Sarah joined us at my house later in the afternoon.  All three of them came with bags packed determined not to leave my side or that of the kids.  

Michele became my personal assistant, chauffeur and caretaker for the next few days. She took me back and forth to the funeral home and to the bank and basically was there to cater to my every whim.  She was next to me every second and I kept her hopping.

Shelly was my list creator and organizer, helping me to figure out what needed to be done and when and by whom.  She ensured that we quickly had a plan and timeline in place.

Sarah was my advisor and backbone, helping me figure things out with her practical approach to everything and just reminding me to keep getting up and to keep going. Though I remember every detail of the day he died, the next week leading up to the service was a blur.  But I do know the Golden Girls were there through it all.  They kept the kids and me moving forward though we were all in shock and existing in a fog.  They gave up their regular lives to ensure that we could keep going with our own, foreign as it was. 

I had other friends who offered to help and did so much for us in those early days and beyond.  Amazing, wonderful friends to whom I beyond grateful for their support and whom I cherish.  But the Golden Girls did not ask, they just showed up in full force and began to do things for us, many of those things we did not even know we needed.

We all held a bunking party in my living room for the first few nights but for a full week at least one of them stayed overnight with us, quietly making sure we had what we needed while at the same time providing as much levity as possible to what would otherwise be a very somber household.  Sarah included us at her Christmas Eve open house, and we attended church with Shelly and her family, followed by brunch at her parents the next morning.  They made sure that all of the bases were covered for us.

Next up they all helped with the many decisions, arrangements and logistics needed to be determined for the service and they took over arrangements for the gathering at our house following.  Michele set up a meal train on Facebook and within an hour or so we had commitments for a dinner meal to be provided for the next month.  She became the great communicator from sharing details of the service with family and friends, to keeping people posted on our progress, to fielding calls from reporters to ordering thank you cards.  I lacked for nothing and my children lacked for nothing because of these three friends.   

In the days and weeks that followed, the Golden Girls had every milestone on the calendar. When any significant day was approaching, they had a plan of action.  Each day would start with an early morning group text exchange to lift my spirits.  New Year's Eve? Bunking party. Valentine's Day? Dinner at my house with me playing chef.  My would-be 20th wedding anniversary?  Impromptu but serious dance party in pajamas on my deck.  Actually most of the time we were together a serious dance party was involved.  As the days passed it became a little easier to laugh and find moments to be light-hearted.  The Golden Girls intentionally created those opportunities for us and ran with them.  They knew that the 21st of each month would be a hard day and another milestone and they were prepared with words of encouragement, a lunch date, an acknowledgment or a gift of some kind.  They didn't miss a single important day.

I could go on and on about the many things they did for the kids and me.  The more important thing to share is that their devotion was instantaneous, completely encompassing and it did not waver.  From tragedy came true friendship.  Today we have an unbreakable, unshakable, forever bond. I absolutely believe that we were destined to come into each other's lives.  This friendship was meant to be and along the way these friends became family and in turn their families adopted us.  

I am so incredibly lucky to have many friends, including those who knew Anthony first.  In no way does this tribute to the Golden Girls detract from the support we have received from other friends.  We could not have made it through this time without them.  What I have come to realize is that our friends support us in ways that they are capable of, using their individual strengths or skills, at any given time.  And sometimes they are simply not capable of providing support because they do not know how or their own pain may be too deep.

That said, this is also a love letter to some friends who are not Golden Girls.  Thank you:

David W. - for being his work partner-in-crime, for keeping his legacy intact and being determined to see it continue, for loving him fiercely and feeling his loss so deeply, for taking a piece of him with you on every hunt, for advising me and encouraging me, for knowing every inch of the farms and where his hiding places were located, for seeing and believing in signs that he is still with us and for sharing them with me; please know that there is a reason he is sharing these signs with you and also know that he loved you

Aaron - for being my friend since childhood then also becoming his friend, for the many hours spent together chasing ducks and dogs at the duck lake, for your devotion to the kids and me, for being my shoulder to cry on, for the advice given, for showing up unannounced (because you knew I would not ask for help) and tackling any home improvement project or bit of manual labor needed, but mostly for being determined that his loss will make you appreciate your own blessings more profoundly - at least outwardly, you have learned and grown the most from this situation, which means his loss is not in vain; please know that he loved you

Dan - for being his friend since middle school, for the many laughs and memories you shared together, for being half of our first "couples friends", for your caring and kindness, for your devotion to him and for your unbelievable fundraising efforts for the kids college fund through Whitetails Unlimited; please know that he loved you

Michelle - for being his friend and then becoming mine, for being the other half of our first "couples friends", for those many fun and hilarious happy hours way back when, for your ever present and one-of-a-kind smile and for always providing encouragement, a kind word and a compliment

Rob - for being his best friend since high school and best man, for the many laughs and memories shared, for the miles traveled and multiple concerts attended together, for being half of our second "couples friends", for supporting each other through significant life losses and for snow-covered driveways shoveled anonymously; please know that he loved you

Greta - for being my friend first and for being the other half of our second "couples friends", and for helping me navigate the legal aspect of death, which has not been easy or immediate

Glenn and David A. - for being a phone call or text away, for advising me and for fixing what needed fixing; please know he loved you

Terri - for your consistent presence during this awful time, for two decades of friendship, for the multiple times we got in trouble for laughing but did not care, for our shared and warped sense of humor, for "Dear Jim" and for big red arrows in presentations

Mike - for being my brother in every way except blood, for being an advisor and mentor, and for being the voice for our stories at the funeral when we could not speak

Linda and Catey - for quietly showing your support, for our group lunches and dinners, for wine and laughs shared together and for consistently checking up on me

D.W. - for helping me find my smile and my faith, which I thought were lost

J.H. - for encouraging me to write this blog, for assuring me that it would help others and for understanding because you have experienced your own awful life loss 

Mark and Brenda - for watching over us from next door, for always being there for whatever we might need and for loving our kids as your own

All of our neighbors - for your help with meals, rides for Kate, walking of Scout and being ready to lend a hand

The "cult-de-sac" crew - for adopting us as honorary members

Daryle, Julie, Charity, Bobbie and now Eric - for your unwavering support and faith in me, for letting me walk away from work for awhile during the busiest time of the year and knowing that all would be well, and for being the best team of leaders a girl could work with

For everyone who helped us in some way, with a card, a hug, a prayer, a positive thought, encouragement, a donation, a meal, whatever it may have been - please know how much your kindness was appreciated.

Friendship is not a sitcom.  There is no script, no producer, no theme song, no opening credits, no conflict with a tidy resolution at the end of 30 minutes.  Friendship is like marriage.  It takes work and commitment to make the relationship grow, thrive and last. Friendship is an investment of time, energy and resources.  And when the friendship is true, the return on the investment is priceless.  I have the best kind of proof.

Thank you, for being our friends.




Thursday, January 4, 2018

A Strong North Wind



On December 29, 2016, we held a celebration of life to honor Anthony. It was a cold, gray, blustery day with a fierce wind coming from the north.  It was completely the opposite of the sunny, unusually warm day just over a week earlier when he died.  The weather on the day we celebrated him was completely by his design as I will explain later in this post.  

I walked into the chapel where I had stood with the kids a few days before to say our goodbyes to Anthony as he lie in a casket.  This time I walked into a chapel filled with flower arrangements and plants too numerous to count, many of the animal mounts that normally filled our basement and poster sized photos of Anthony that all flocked the simple wooden box that now contained his ashes.  No casket needed this time.  

I could not believe the outpouring of support that the kids and I received on that day.  There was a solid line of people starting 15 minutes before the visitation began and lasting through its two-hour duration, with many people never getting the chance to speak to us directly.  I watched that line snake down the side of the chapel and out to the foyer.  I was later told that many people waited patiently for a long time outside in the cold to be able to pay their respects to us.  I am not sure how many people came or if they all signed the guest book. Some of my friends estimated close to 700 people attended that day. They came from all over the country and included family, friends, clients, co-workers, former neighbors, classmates, teachers, you name it.  It was a mix of both familiar faces and faces we had never seen before.  Every seat was taken in the chapel and every additional square inch was filled with people standing.  The overflow space in the basement was filled, too, where attendees watched the service as it happened. Though I could not see them very clearly, I cannot express how moving it was to see the entire Rock Bridge football team show up in their jerseys to honor Ben. The attendance that day speaks to the fine person Anthony was, the impact he made on many lives and in the hunting industry, and the legacy he leaves behind.

Many of Anthony's colleagues came for the service, including his boss from Minnesota.  He spoke about how well-respected Anthony was in the field and what a blow his loss was to both his business and the industry overall.  He and representatives from Bear Archery, the primary line sold by Hudalla Associates, also posthumously presented an award to Anthony for Bear sales representative of the year.  The decision had been made to give Anthony the award the day before he died and he had not yet been told.  He would have been thrilled to receive the coveted award, and I have no doubt he was watching and smiling from above.  

Many of Anthony's friends and some of our family members wrote their own memories which were shared at the service.  And, unbelievably to me, Ben and Kate left my side in the audience, joined hands and walked up to the stage where they stood in front of the large crowd and shared their own memories and funny stories about their dad.  I was in awe and have never been more proud of them than in those few minutes.  I kept thinking about how strength, both inherited and learned, was the primary gift he instilled in them.  And what a gift it is.

Some of Anthony's close friends created a slideshow with pictures of him from childhood up to the present.  Music was an important part of the service.  We carefully selected the songs played during the visitation to represent Anthony's musical tastes, though we did not play the heavy metal that he loved the most. My good friend Nollie, a fantastic tenor, and his two sons sang a version of Hallelujah that was jaw-dropping and an amazing tribute to Anthony's life.  

The last song played at the service as we walked out was unorthodox but so Anthony.  He loved music and had seen dozens of concerts with his friends.  Iron Maiden was one of his favorite bands and he saw them about 10 times.  At the end of every concert as the crowd filtered out, thousands of fans would whistle along with the song "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life" by Monty Python's Eric Idle.  One time when Anthony was snow goose hunting with our friend Aaron and the hunting was not so great, Anthony said he wished they had that song to play over the snow goose caller so the hunters they were competing with could hear it.  Aaron, being a DJ who is always prepared, had the song on his phone and gave it to Anthony to broadcast it at full blast across the field through the multi-speaker caller.  Aaron said that he never saw Anthony smile bigger or longer in his life.  So of course we asked attendees to whistle along with the song as they left, to reflect on Anthony's life and to know that he would love being sent off in this way.   

Below is the eulogy that I wrote for that day.  

Anthony and I met in March of 1992 when I was 20 and he was 21.  Instantly I knew that he was special.  He had a smile that lit up a room, a combination of happy-go-lucky and mischief.  We became inseparable very quickly.  Though we were both smitten, we dated a full five years before getting married.  On June 14, 1997, we got married at Linn Memorial Methodist Church on the Central Methodist University campus in Fayette, my hometown.  

Anthony was a devoted husband and he loved me deeply.  He showed that love most often by teasing me mercilessly and by playing pranks on me.  Among his favorites - leaving rubber snakes for me to find or chasing me with them, putting bubble wrap under my car tires to scare me when I backed out of the garage and his favorite, blowing a duck call to make me jump while I was in the shower.  He blew that duck call for the last time on the morning he died.  Though we were complete opposites in just about every way, we were very happy together and we shared matching philosophies on the things that mattered. 

Ben came along in February of 1999.  Anthony was so proud to have a son.  I remember vividly that huge smile on his face when Ben was born.  Kate followed in March of 2004.  From the first moment he saw her, she had his heart.  Ben and Kate could not have asked for a more devoted father.  Though he traveled frequently with work, he always made it a point to stay connected.  He was in the stands or bleachers for every football and basketball game, on the sidelines as an assistant soccer coach for several years, and in the audience at every concert, recital and performance.  Anthony was not particularly close to his father, who also died too young.  But that compelled him to ensure a close relationship with his own children, to be the father he didn't have growing up.  He succeeded.  He could not have been a better role model to our kids.

Anthony loved the outdoors.  We went from season to season in our house - deer, duck, snow goose, turkey, etc. I always dreaded deer season and told Anthony that was when he was the least fun to live with.  It was because he was chasing the trophy.  Not just a deer but an exceptional deer.  That meant many days up waking up well before dawn and sitting in a tree stand with no promise of a harvest.  Anthony might arrive home each day without the trophy deer but he enjoyed his experience, of watching the sun come up and the world waking up, the stillness of the woods. Then there were the great days when he did harvest a big deer.   The smile on his face, the story he had to tell, the pride in his voice.  When duck and snow goose season arrived, he was practically giddy.  He took such great pride in duck hunting with his black Labrador retrievers, first Bailey and then Scout.  Anthony always said Scout was the best retriever he had ever seen and she worshiped the ground he walked on.  She continues to watch and wait for him to come home.  

Anthony was the hardest working person I knew, only to be rivaled by my father. His entire career was spent in the sporting goods industry. He covered a large territory for many years working with accounts in Missouri, Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska and Southern Illinois.  Though he didn't like to be away from us for long periods of time, he truly loved his job as a manufacturer's representative with Hudalla Associates.  It was more than a job or a paycheck for him.  He felt incredibly lucky to turn his hobby and passion for the outdoors into a career.  Anthony gave his customers the royal treatment, with many of them becoming close friends over the years.  He would always tell them he was available 24/7 and he meant it. He took such great pride in his work and that's why he was so successful.  He was born to do it.

Anthony had a laugh that was epic. When he thought something was really funny, everyone around him knew it.  His laugh was utterly contagious.  He loved to laugh and he was incredibly funny.  Around people he didn't know well, he might come across as quiet.  But to his friends and family he showed his huge personality.  He was really witty and was known for inserting a hilarious, usually naughty, comment when you least expected it.  His timing was always impeccable and he never disappointed.  

Anthony was the strongest person I have ever met.  Physically he could out bench press most men and he was proud of that.  Emotionally he was as stable as they come.  He lost his entire family, both parents and his two older brothers, all before he turned 40.  But he didn't let that define him. He used that loss to make him a better person, a better husband, a better father and a better friend.  

Anthony was always early.  Being on time meant 15 minutes before an appointment.  30 minutes before was even better.  He was always on the go, always had a million projects at once.

Anthony was a fierce friend.  He chose his close friends very carefully and they were a select group.  To him, those friends were family.  He would drop what he was doing, no matter the time, if a friend needed him.  And they would do the same for him.  Several of them have pledged to continue to be there for the kids and me and they have upheld that promise.  
      
Anthony loved to help people.  When we had any measurable snow, he got on his four-wheeler and plowed our driveway, then he did the same for the neighbors.  Several years ago we had a snowstorm that shut Columbia down for days.  He stayed inside for as long as he could stand it, then got outside to plow our driveway and the neighbors drives as he always did.  A snowplow had not yet come through our subdivision, so he plowed the street.  Then he realized that he needed gas and he plowed his way to the nearest gas station, more than a mile away.  He was the only customer there and when he went in to pay, the clerk asked if he would be willing to plow the driveway.  He was offered a candy bar and a soda as payment.  Of course he said he would do it and he did, not because of what he was offered but because he saw an opportunity to help. But he did take the candy bar. 

Anthony lived life to the fullest.  He cherished every day he had on this Earth.  His loss is a terrible tragedy but he died the way he would have wanted to - quickly, with little pain and in his beloved outdoors.  He would not want anyone to cry or mourn him for too long.  Instead he would want us to move on with our lives and think of him fondly from time to time.  It is fitting that he passed away on the first day of winter.  He always told me he wanted to be cremated and have his ashes scattered into a cold north wind so that when I felt that north wind on the back of my neck I would think of him.  I hope everyone who loved him will join me in thinking of him when that cold north wind blows. 

One of my favorite movies is Four Weddings and a Funeral and who knows how many times I have seen it?  I always liked a poem from the movie and listened carefully to the words each time I heard them.  Of course I did not realize that they would later represent my thoughts during my own time of loss.  We did not include this poem as part of the service but it speaks to how I felt during that worst period in my life and how I imagine others who have suffered a loss must feel, as well.  

The north wind is blowing as I write these words.  In fact, the wind has been blowing from the north for days in brutal, record cold temperatures both here and across the country. And the sun just came out after being missing for days. Coincidence?  Maybe.  Or, maybe not.  
  
Funeral Blues by WH Auden


Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone,
Prevent the dog from barking with a juicy bone,
Silence the pianos and with muffled drum
Bring out the coffin, let the mourners come.

Let airplanes circle moaning overhead
Scribbling on the sky the message 'He is Dead.’
Put crepe bows round the white necks of the public doves,
Let the traffic policemen wear black cotton gloves.

He was my North, my South, my East and West,
My working week and my Sunday rest,
My noon, my midnight, my talk, my song;
I thought that love would last forever: I was wrong.

The stars are not wanted now; put out every one,
Pack up the moon and dismantle the sun,
Pour away the ocean and sweep up the wood;
For nothing now can ever come to any good.