So we have remained, With the constancy of stubborn and vestigial elms, Through any number of moons and Junes, Equally as many improbable springtimes, Madnesses of petunias and potholes, But with a fidelity relatively unstrained, untested, Our travails being minor things, Trivial as opposed to titanic, Our hithers and yons no more Than the muted triumph of simply carrying on And we could ask, one supposes Have we truly loved, then? Such questions are best left to poets and philosophers (Grandiloquent fools with time and inclination For such lines of inquiry) And though the panorama of our time together Will be an unprepossessing thing, No strings heating up and crescendoing As the camera pans wide in a sweeping crane shot Of great craggy valleys, the zenith of white-capped peaks (The lumpy moraines of our landscape, Merely bits of sediment moved half-heartedly by the odd glacier, Providing rather uninspiring visuals) We suspect, no we know, know in such a way That it is as unremarkable as blinking an eye Or making some unconscious sound Which annoys yet endears in the same moment, That we would be all, give all, Unreservedly and unhesitatingly immolating Any thought or concept of self in service of the other, And the notion that all of that occurs Away from the watchful eye of director or camera Does not diminish it in the least.