Piano Overture
He came to our
apartment twice a year
to tune my
mother's piano. All day long
we tiptoed,
trying not to interfere
with what to
us were strange, unearthly songs.
He never
struck a heavy, luscious chord—
only fifths,
fourths, octaves—clean and spare;
brandishing
his hammer like a sword,
we watched him
wring concordance from the air.
Taut as pulled
wire, he'd lean into the keys,
his practiced
fingers pressing note on note,
hunting down
aberrant harmonies
and any latent
quaver in the throat.
At last the
piano, gaping and undone,
its very heart
exposed for all to see,
would wait in
silence, chastened as a nun,
for the
blasphemies of Chopin and Satie.
Marilyn L. Taylor
From
Troika I, Thorntree Press, ©
1991. Reprinted
by permission of the author.
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