6.27.2021

offer a little toast

After the affair and the moving out, 
after the destructive revivifying passion, 
we watched her life quiet 
 
into a new one, her lover more and more 
on its periphery. She spent many nights 
alone, happy for the narcosis 
 
of the television. When she got cancer 
she kept it to herself until she couldn't 
keep it from anyone. The chemo debilitated 
and saved her, and one day 
 
her husband asked her to come back— 
his wife, who after all had only fallen 
in love as anyone might 
who hadn't been in love in a while— 

and he held her, so different now, 
so thin, her hair just partially 
grown back. He held her like a new woman 

and what she felt 
felt almost as good as love had, 
and each of them called it love 
because precision didn't matter anymore. 
 
And we who'd been part of it, 
often rejoicing with one 
and consoling the other, 
 
we who had seen her truly alive 
and then merely alive, 
what could we do but revise 
our phone book, our hearts, 
 
offer a little toast to what goes on. 
 

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