In the South, a funeral isn’t just a formality. It’s a moment when music becomes memory, and memory becomes something you can hum for the rest of your life. —Tom Daniel

My memory puts on a coat of gray,
A keening tweed that moans just like a choir,
A dirge-like gabardine that knows the way
Of tears, a worsted wool, cloth of a crier.

My keening tweed—that moans just like a choir,
Weighing me down in sorrow—brings relief
With tears. A worsted wool—cloth of the crier
Made with the flow of tears—holds all our grief,

Weighing me down in sorrow. Pain’s relief
Is cadence, slow and marching. Snare and drum,
Made with the taps of tears, rattles our grief.
The music moves. Memory’s a lasting hum—

A cadence, slowly marching snare, the drum
Of mourners, fiddler at the piney box.
Music moves memory, makes a lasting hum,
A crier’s melody that rocks and knocks.

The mourners, fiddler at the piney box,
and memory put on their coats of gray,
The crier’s melody, sweet tears and knocks,
A dirge-like gabardine that shows the way.


Maura H. Harrison

Maura H. Harrison is a writer and artist from Fredericksburg, VA. She is an MFA candidate in Poetry at the University of St. Thomas, Houston. Maura has published with Dappled Things, The Windhover, THINK: A Journal of Poetry, Fiction, and Essays, among others. She can be found at mauraharrison.com and mauraharrison.substack.com.

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