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 |  | For A Gymnopedie By Satie
 
 
I think continually of pliant bodies, of dancers'sculpted thighs, or the well muscled calves
 of sprinters who win gold. How rapidly green
 vanishes. How well December fills the last crannies
 of sensation, a door freezing winds slam so tight
 no hands can ever pry it open. The demands
 of being old lose urgency when the task of dying
 asserts its rights, a subpoena bones can't refuse.
 
 Forget the victories sealed in cadenzas, in sharps,
 or the defeats well hidden among black keys
 in decrescendo flats. They are the substance
 of the stone in which your name is to be chiseled,
 that will loom above the bouquets, roses, violets,
 and lilies, that will finally bedeck your second life.
 
By Oswald LeWinter QLRS Vol. 3 No. 3 Apr 2004
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