We know the winter earth upon the body of the young President, and the early dark falling: we know the veins grown quiet in his temples and wrists, and his hands and eyes grown quiet; we know his name written in the black capitals of his death, and the mourners standing in the rain, and the leaves falling; we know his death’s horses and drums; the roses, bells, candles, crosses; the faces hidden in veils; we know the children who begin the youth of loss greater than they can dream now; we know the night long coming of faces into the candle- light before his coffin, and their passing; we know the mouth of the grave waiting, the bugle and rifles, the mourners turning away; we know the young dead body carried in the earth into the first deep night of its absence; we know our streets and days slowly opening into the time he is not alive, filling with our footsteps and voices; we know ourselves, the bearers of the light of the earth he is given to, and the light of all his lost days; we know the long approach of summers towards the healed ground where he will be waiting, no longer the keeper of what he was. —Wendell Berry