A poem about a painting I found depressing! |
Painting by the Artist, Vermeer My eyes flicker across the name on the card brought to me by Nurse. I can barely read the writing, my eyes become dim. Alas, the callers are others, not him. “I’ll not see anyone”, I plead to Nurse, “Not today, not tomorrow. I will not entertain during, this, my sorrow. (Oh my heart doth faint) Leave me to my chambers. From now on, I romance only my pain.” “Beggin’ your pardon, marm.” Nurse moves towards the parlor to turn the caller away. I will scatter music sheets around my room, strum an elegy to misbegotten love, symphony to my gloom. I will gaze at the paintings on the wall and travel through the landscapes hung one over the other. Stark rocks intimidate my soul, desolate trees speak of wilted promises, like the flower that droops from his buttonhole. Feet span the cold black and white squares, echo dead footsteps on the marble floor. I will climb into bed, call for Nurse, “Pull the curtain around my last dream, let me sleep, close the bedchamber door. I will see callers no more.” Before I torture with thoughts insane, and furthermore break the reader’s heart, I contemplate the canvas, then remember that I am just an artist’s dreary work of art. |