He was always so interestingly wrong. I loved him, in fact for years couldn’t live without him, he who helped crystallize what I thought by being so opposed to it. But it’s time to rejoice. Some of the invisible roads that run parallel to the great boulevards can be seen now; the era of darkness- as-illumination has passed. It was useful while it lasted, but how nice to discover that so few of us count on negatives these days to preserve what we hold dear. My friends, if you can think of me as such, take heart. Meaninglessness has ended its long run at the Palace. Already, a few of us mere specks in the universe have begun to insist on our importance. May the odors of lilac and laurel waft across the river, and float over his grave. The great nihilist is dead. He’ll rise again when needed. He always has. But those of you standing now, having turned your backs to me in protest, how right that you honor him so. It’s the kind of negation that he, I suspect, would have thought might lead somewhere, might even have thought was hopeful.