For the Duration
NEWS | 10 May 2025
Explore the May 2025 Issue Check out more from this issue and find your next story to read. View More For Jay Hopler The philosophers I love believed in things they didn’t want to convert to; the isolation of the thought, of the shattering idea, lonelied them into a truth that would tremble too much were it carried from desk to window, its outermost manifestations too loosened, too far specified to seem much other than frailty now. And what I think they feared, or what I fear when tempted to tell you of something I saw, how it moved in me this way or that, what relief, what chiding need for a little sturdy peace this sight allowed, or that touch, and of what, or with whom, is that such confiding could draw down the paradox that although it has no mass, light does strike. What we don’t say is bright as metal bells. And were my friend still alive, I’d want to make a meal for him, something not all that skilled, but not all that terrible, lit with forefire and the lateness of the hour. The giant peony erupting its skull from the center of the table would gather in us an enormity of conviction so thorough, we’d want to carry it elsewhere, the risk of its complete disheveling, its dropping open, requiring us to resist the second thought that wants so badly to follow the first, that conviction itself pulls behind it a mender’s cart—, mustn’t it? Better just to look at what the ludicrous spring had done, not saying much of it, speaking instead of anything else, certainly least of all trying to outlive it by saying there will be more—not now, but come next spring.
Author: Katie Ford.
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