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Simplify Me When I’m Dead

Remember me when I am dead
and simplify me when I’m dead.
 
As the processes of earth
strip off the colour of the skin:
take the brown hair and blue eye
 
and leave me simpler than at birth,
when hairless I came howling in
as the moon entered the cold sky.
 
Of my skeleton perhaps,
so stripped, a learned man will say
“He was of such a type and intelligence,” no more.
 
Thus when in a year collapse
particular memories, you may
deduce, from the long pain I bore
 
the opinions I held, who was my foe
and what I left, even my appearance
but incidents will be no guide.
 
Time’s wrong-way telescope will show
a minute man ten years hence
and by distance simplified.
 
Through that lens see if I seem
substance or nothing: of the world
deserving mention or charitable oblivion,
 
not by momentary spleen
or love into decision hurled,
leisurely arrive at an opinion.
 
Remember me when I am dead
and simplify me when I’m dead.
Other works by Keith Douglas...



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