A poem about a man who's lost his way in the world and doesn't know how to live his life. |
His sorrows well beneath the surface, His crying hidden in his dreams, Well aware of life he’s missing, Well aware his time is up. He’s tried so hard To make ends meet. He’s tried so hard To stay secure, Yet underneath his soul is bleeding, Underneath, he’s all alone. He met-up, then, with a friend from school, Said his friend, “My, how you’ve changed, “You once I saw so free and happy, “What went wrong? Where did you go?” Through thrills and chills And red-light districts, No sacred son is he. He’s seen the world, And he’s lost to it; Now he doesn’t have a home. “Between Earth and Heaven, I go my way: “The chafe upon the wind; I’m scattered. “Forget what manner of man I was, “I’m broken down and without walls.” Oh, the poor man Has lost his way. So tired of going on, He’s drifting on and endless sea. Too afraid of change to start his life, He’s throwing all himself away. Oh, the glimmer’s gone; the spark of life’s gone dull. He lives only in a brazen world, a pretender like them all. Oh, a pretender, like them all. Not original at all. Not at all. |