Poem: My Funeral Speech
If someone were ignorant enough
Of the way that I think,
Or courageous enough,
To ask me to speak at a funeral,
.
I don’t think everyone would stay
Until the end
Of my speech.
Or that they would allow me to.
.
Because I
Would sigh,
Look everyone in the eye,
And then say…
.
What has happened
(“To” “the deceased”)
Is not a miracle,
And was inevitable:
.
To live
Is to owe life
To die—
To leave
Life.
.
It takes some people
A long time to pay.
And it takes some
A short time.
.
Some people are paying now,
As I speak.
And the rest of us will pay later.
Over a million of us,
(Thousands of whom are not
And will not be sick,
Hundreds of whom are strong),
Within a week.
.
Some people leave life after
They have lived for a hundred
Years.
And some leave life before
They have lived for a hundred
Seconds.
Or even four—
Or less.
.
What’s more,
Almost all of us
(All of whom
Did not choose
Whether to exist)
Do not choose
When to exit
Life—
Although we can,
If we choose
To exit now.
.
In other words,
And in closing,
The bigger the family,
The longer the list
Of corpses
It owes life.
* * *
(This poem is available as a print, sticker, on a canvas, tote bag, etc.)
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Some of my books: Why I Write, F for Philosopher, On Friendship.