He sits there quietly, This elderly man who knows so much of me, He sits there quietly, Listening to the me I want to be. Never does he say a word, So I call him Jean, He just nods and watches pigeons peck, I wonder of all he has seen. Everytime I ask him, He just shakes his head and waves his hand, I know he's almost out of time, His hourglass almost out of sand. Often I see him at the bar I work at, Drowning his sorrows in his drink, I never go to comfort him, Just wash the dishes in the sink. I want to know so much about this man, Like a friend I never had, But he says not a word, not a peep, It's not all that bad. He sits there quietly, This elderly man who knows so much of me, He sits there quietly, Listening to the me I want to be. I ask him time and time again, Where's his family, his kin? But he only points to the ground, Making not a sound. I want to yell at him to speak, For I know he is so weak, I see it in his eyes and the shaking of his hand, Soon he will leave this land. "Tell me something about me," I plead, It's now not a want but a need. He simply smiles and throws some bread, I wonder of the thoughts going on in his head, He looks so pitiful with his hair a mess, And if he'd stop drinking he'd not feel death's kiss. Everyday I ask him one more time, Why he won't speak, what was it like in another age and time? He doesn't say a word and gives instead a silent goodbye, As if he knows when he will die. The next day I went to the park, The day dreary and dark, He was not there, I went to the morgue, He was here in this place of dispair. I held a funeral for him, The least I could do, For only a few people came, It was my time to go. There on the park bench I wept, for the friend in the suit of pale gray, The sidewalks remained unswept, Old and unique in age, Like a story turns a page, I pick up the box and dig a hole, Knowing that inside it the secrets I wanted to know, I put the box into the dirt like my friend, Never to be opened or looked at again. Up there I swear He sits there quietly, This elderly man who knows so much of me, He sits there quietly, Listening to the me I want to be. |