Extracurricular

“I only desire to find out knowledge . . . which may instruct me how to die well and how to live well.”
—Michel de Montaigne

“Life Skills”—the mindless high-school class that knocks
Into our callow heads the way to do
The forms we face whenever something new
Requires our consent: a job, some stocks,
Our wedding vows, the keys to office locks,
Insurance claims, a condo with a view.
Just check right here and sign right there—you’re through.
Hearse drivers see who’s learned to fill a box.

New forms will school survivors when we die:
Interment forms and probate forms and more.
Few experts in death’s forms will hear the cry
Rabboni! echoing through a tomb’s wide door:
The voice of Mary, stunned to see the face
Of One no scribe could ever hold in place.

—Bryce Christensen

Next
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

Trump Brings the West to the West Wing 

Susannah Seltzer

It’s hard to think of a sport that embodies the American spirit better than rodeo. But while…

The Art of Arguing Well

Michael DeFelice

Mastering the Four Arguments:The Classical Art of Persuasive Writingby gregory roperencounter books, 192 pages, $29.99 A major…

The Qur’an’s Christians

Gabriel Said Reynolds

Hollywood released quite a few movies about Jesus in the 1960s and ’70s. Not all got rave…