We found some really fun pictures and spent a couple of hours reminiscing. It's amazing how many memories we've made in our almost 8 years of marriage. We also ran across some interesting newspaper clippings and odds and ends that I must have stuffed into the drawers at one point or another, not knowing what to do with them. One of my most delightful finds was this poem, which was written by the son of my all-time favorite music professor in college; the director of the concert chorale I sang in for four years:
This poem is for you.
It is to be carried into battle and kept
close to your heart.
It is to be forgotten, remembered,
and with each remembrance,
uncovered, allowed to
breathe and see the sunlight.
This poem is me.
Let it love you in its way.
It is to be carried into battle and kept
close to your heart.
It is to be forgotten, remembered,
and with each remembrance,
uncovered, allowed to
breathe and see the sunlight.
This poem is me.
Let it love you in its way.
Professor Weiss' son Christopher wrote that poem for him and he carried it in his pocket for years before he commissioned a composer friend to set it, and several of Christopher's other poems to music. We performed these pieces at the end of my freshman year, with Christopher in the audience, completely shocked by what his father had done for him, and Professor Weiss tearfully conducting the orchestra and our choir. What a beautiful relationship these two men shared (still share, I'm sure). I've come across this poem on and off in the 16 years since I first heard it, and it still touches me every time. It is amazing how one can completely forget something, yet when remembered and given time to breathe, the memory is so sweet and comforting.
I think there may be two or three others reading this who may remember singing this poem - and how about Daffodils? Aren't we blessed to have our thoughts and memories shaped by the music we experience? And to not only "experience" that music, but to be a part of the fabric of the music?
I think there may be two or three others reading this who may remember singing this poem - and how about Daffodils? Aren't we blessed to have our thoughts and memories shaped by the music we experience? And to not only "experience" that music, but to be a part of the fabric of the music?
1 comment:
Magnificat, magnificat...I'd continute with the lyrics, but I've forgotten them because I have the WORST memory in the history of singers. Thank you for jogging it a bit. I do remember, albeit faintly, Christopher's poem. What was the one he had us sing in rehearsals with our eyes closed? I loved that piece. Oh, and Rutter's The Lord is My Shepherd with the oboe solo...delicious.
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