As to me, I know of nothing else but miracles. —Walt Whitman en memoria William Rashall Sinkin, 1913–2014 Whitman, you once told me, is democracy on the page, messy and imperfect as we are in real life, which gave you hope that we would one day make real life true democracy, ripe blossom, pollen dusting every moment and person, each scampering mote of light. This is why as you lay dying, I read “I Hear America Singing” and knew you heard every word and could feel my hand on yours though you were already moving toward other miracles than this life. A sunflower followed your motion and a yellow dog stood guard. You, who lived the notion that the sun belongs to each and every one, beggars, dreamers, kings, all. You who believed banks could have hearts, for god’s sake! You have left it to us, messy and imperfect as we are and will be, to keep to the work side by side and as long as it takes, all the while singing of miracles just as Whitman and you taught us to do. Meanwhile, you were last seen wearing blue-plaid pajamas, a contrasting blue-plaid bow tie, and surrounded by hummingbirds. Hummingbirds leave Texas in early February, migrating north to make new lives. The angle of the sun tells them precisely when to take their leave. They arrive thousands of miles away in mid-May, about the time of your birthday. A sunflower follows your motion. The yellow dog stands guard. |
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