It’s been rather a tough year for me in terms of losing
friends to death, so let me take advantage of Gratitude Monday coinciding with
All Souls' Day to pull back—pull in—and both mourn and rejoice for two of them
in particular.
I’ve written about John
and Leilah
before, even though of course there aren’t enough words. You have loved ones
like them, too, if you’re lucky.
Over the weekend I’ve been dosing myself with requiems—mostly
Verdi’s and Mozart’s. But I don’t think you need to come here for 60 to 90
minutes’ worth of solemnity. El Día de
los Muertos is about celebrating the dead and knowing that some day we’ll
be among them, either corporeally or spiritually, however you view such things.
So here are a couple of shorter pieces that are indelibly
entwined in my memory with my two friends. First, “Poor Wand’ring One”, from Pirates of Penzance, which John
introduced me to in my junior year of college. (I well recall Julie, a fellow student
in my military history class, giving me a précis of this particular song,
including the cadenza.)
This version is from the D’Oyly Carte, the company John
loved the best for Gilbert & Sullivan.
Leilah’s song is Mary Black’s cover of “Bless the Road”,
here paired with her “Speaking with the Angel”. She loved this piece; her sweet
companion was her son, Anthony. It was on a DC I made for her to give him when
he was in hospital.
We’re heading into the dark time of the year, when we step
up our efforts to fill the night with light both literally and metaphorically. All
Souls' Day gives us the opportunity to step between life and death, to consider
those who’ve gone ahead of us and perhaps reflect on how we’ll make that
journey ourselves. There was a time when this was meaningless to me, but I get
it now. And I’m grateful for it.
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