The violinists’ laughter and tears
are flung from her flying bow,
drip from his elbow,
and wash over the stilled audience –
we can taste the sea
as we threaten to capsize.
The viola is the older brother
now steadying, now caught
in the wave, riding
its dizzying course,
dragging us in its wake.
The cello is a torso, the cellist
a surgeon, her hands
plucking small miracles
from stretched gut,
shouting for, then at,
the still stunned gods.
Somewhere, Brahms
must be smiling.
First Published in The Right to Depart, Plain View Press, 2008.
Excellent description! Thanks.