Tags
In the graduation speech that went viral last year, George Saunders wrote:
“Most people, as they age, become less selfish and more loving. I think this is true. The great Syracuse poet, Hayden Carruth, said, in a poem written near the end of his life, that he was ‘mostly Love, now.'”
For a long time I could not find the poem he mentioned. But a reader who heard about my search found the poem and kindly shared it with me. Now I share it with you, a deeply moving testament to love and marriage, as our lives wind down.
Testament
by Hayden Carruth
So often it has been displayed to us, the hourglass
with its grains of sand drifting down,
not as an object in our world
but as a sign, a symbol, our lives
drifting down grain by grain,
sifting away — I’m sure everyone must
see this emblem somewhere in the mind.
Yet not only our lives drift down. The stuff
of ego with which we began, the mass
in the upper chamber, filters away
as love accumulates below. Now
I am almost entirely love. I have been
to the banker, the broker, those strange
people, to talk about unit trusts,
annuities, CDs, IRAs, trying
to leave you whatever I can after
I die. I’ve made my will, written
you a long letter of instructions.
I think about this continually.
What will you do? How
will you live? You can’t go back
to cocktail waitressing in the casino.
And your poetry? It will bring you
at best a pittance in our civilization,
a widow’s mite, as mine has
for forty-five years. Which is why
I leave you so little. Brokers?
Unit trusts? I’m no financier doing
the world’s great business. And the sands
in the upper glass grow few. Can I leave
you the vale of ten thousand trilliums
where we buried our good cat Pokey
across the lane to the quarry?
Maybe the tulips I planted under
the lilac tree? Or our red-bellied
woodpeckers who have given us so
much pleasure, and the rabbits
and the deer? And kisses? And
love-makings? All our embracings?
I know millions of these will be still
unspent when the last grain of sand
falls with its whisper, its inconsequence,
on the mountain of my love below.
Discover more from Deborah J. Brasket, Author
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

beautiful…simply beautiful…..
LikeLike
This is a lovely poem. Thanks for sharing it.
LikeLike
One of the best poems I have ever seen. It’s so awesome ! Love it !
LikeLike
Reblogged this on vacuummonologues.
LikeLike
Beautiful 🙂
LikeLike
“When it’s last grain of sand falls with it’s whisper …”
That is lovely! and it’s so good to hear from you, Deborah!
LikeLike
I do follow your blog but probably wasn’t at the time this was written. A friend on Facebook posted about the commencement speech and curious about the poem I went looking for it. I was so moved by this I have sent a link to your blog to my husband as I feel it will speak to him as well.
Especially, these lines are meaningful in our own world –
“. . . our red-bellied
woodpeckers who have given us so
much pleasure, and the rabbits
and the deer? And kisses? And
love-makings? All our embracings?”
It is always about the bunnies in our household (an inside joke with some definite seriousness as we have a pet rabbit living in our kitchen and lots of cottontails outdoors). We are doing our best to come to terms with our own aging and eventual demise.
LikeLike
Thank you, Deby! I can’t believe that I’ve taken so long to answer you and others on this post. Usually I do so within days, something must have happened to keep me away at that time. Anyway, a belated thank you and hope all is well with you and yours.
LikeLike
Sigh.
LikeLike
These sentiments carry a lot of truth. I notice more and more as I age that I derive a simple glowing and building inner joy from doing things for people, for others. And how freeing it is to think less and less of myself, my own benefit.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I love what you say here. I too am trying to be mostly love now. I feel more myself when I am, but there’s still those sharp edges that need smoothing now and then.
LikeLike
🙂
LikeLike
Thank you for making my life easier. You’re a gem.
LikeLike