Song information On this page you can find the lyrics of the song Chapter 87 of He, artist - Sun Kil Moon. Album song This Is My Dinner, in the genre Инди
Date of issue: 31.10.2018
Record label: Caldo Verde
Song language: English
Chapter 87 of He |
At Oceana Apartments, a breeze arises, blowing in from the Pacific. |
The balcony doors are open, and the salt sweat scent of the sea is on his skin, |
and on his lips, and in the air that he breathes. |
His senses are more acute |
since he stopped smoking. |
Chesterfield, his brand of choice, provided the |
finance for The Stolen Jools, and he and Babe generated some income by |
advertising Old Gold cigarettes, although he could never smoke Old Gold himself. |
Either way, the tobacco companies made their money back from him a thousand |
times over, and now his is an old man smelling the world anew |
Lois, his daughter, calls him on the telephone. |
He enjoys hearing from her, |
and loves spending time with his grandchildren. |
He could, perhaps, |
have tried fro more children of his own, but he chose not to. |
His daughter is |
to be his sole such blessing |
Ida says that she always knows when Lois is on the other end of the telephone. |
He does not even have to speak her name. |
Ida can hear it in his voice, |
and see it in the expression on his face |
Before I die, Ida sometimes says, I wish I could witness that expression on |
your face just once when I call. |
If your tone is anything to go by, |
your face won’t look like it does when you hear from Lois |
He always hushes her. |
If he is an a bad mood, he tells her that she sounds like |
Anita Garvin |
Or Vera, although he only thinks this and never utters it aloud |
He will die soon. |
He knows this on some animal level. |
He does not mind dying. |
He is not afraid. |
He will miss his daughter, and he will miss Ida, |
but he is now discarding days like small bills until all are spent, |
disposing of the hours by writing letters and waiting for strangers to call. |
He is excited by new deliveries of stationary with the Oceana letterhead. |
In another life, he might have been content to run a stationary store, |
with ascending grades of material from the cheapest to the finest, |
and even the poorest stored carefully to preserve it from damp stains. |
He retains a small stock of expensive cotton paper, which he uses sparingly. |
He admires the randomness of the watermark it bears, so that no two sheets are |
alike |
He has always been ambivalent about unpredictability, about disorder. |
He tried to impose order upon his life, and failed. |
He resisted the imposition |
of order upon his art, and succeeded. |
In both spheres of his existence, |
he ultimately embraced chaos |
These are the subjects about which he thinks, when he is alone at the Oceana |
Apartments |
He is not sad about the imminence of mortality. |
He feels that the purposeful |
part of his existence ended many years ago, and the best part of it concluded |
with Babe’s death. |
He has never been a particularly religious man. |
He and Babe had this in common. |
Reincarnation appeals to him, but only if he |
can retain some memory of the mistakes that he has made in this life and |
therefore only if he can retain some memory of Babe |
He does not trust in reincarnation alone to reunite him with Babe. |
He does not trust in reincarnation alone to reunite him with Babe. |
He does not trust in reincarnation alone to reunite him with Babe. |
He does not trust in reincarnation alone to reunite him with Babe. |
Fate, perhaps, but not reincarnation, because it was fate that brought them |
together, these lives entwined like lovers' limbs |