On Silence, and Other Furnishings
Essay7 min read·February 11, 2026

On Silence, and Other Furnishings

August Reinholt
August Reinholt

Fiction. The hour before dawn.

My grandfather, who built boats, used to say that silence was a room you furnished, not a room you entered. This struck me as a strange claim when I was twelve. It strikes me, now, as the most accurate description of silence I have ever been given.

The furnishings

A clock, ticking in another room. The soft settle of a house adjusting to its own weight. The breath of someone asleep beside you. The distant, patient complaint of a radiator. The sound of your own attention, which is not quite a sound.

Silence, in other words, is almost never silent. It is a particular arrangement of quiet things — a composition, if you like, of withdrawals. A room without any sound at all is not silent. It is deafening, and after a while, unkind.

True silence is company. It is the version of company in which nothing is being asked of you.

A practice

I have been learning, slowly, to furnish silence the way my grandfather furnished it. A chair by the window. A book I am not reading. A lamp that is on for no particular reason. The kettle, cooling.

The rooms I like best, now, are the ones that know how to be quiet without becoming empty.

August Reinholt
August Reinholt

August writes short fiction rooted in Danish coastal towns. His stories tend to begin with a door left open and end with someone listening for a sound that does not come.

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