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A little poem I wrote based on The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock by T.S. Eliot |
My heart did echo for a deep eternity While the winds of yesterday swept through The hollow place Now I find myself remembering broken things Like a fallen bough that wished to wander But curses the world as it sings I remember the lamppost’s drone And summer glow As you might hoped it would have deep below While the falling petals meet on the edges Of walls and window sills Too tired to seek glory and cheap thrills Content to just be And to be beautiful But if I were to think back and see Back when we would talk of you and me And watch the world go by from a passenger’s seat Whilst papers fall from sights and stairs In the morning hours when no cares When people would talk of me and you I should hope then, that you remember too There was a good man who came around the back Sometime today, while we fed birds who hated the sun He seemed to be a nervous thing And he wore a black tie, and tarnished ring Did he take you away? I can’t recall much of anything anymore But I do think about those bottles And the old plates scattered about the floor How they remind me of broken things As a wax seal on that letter I never sent Now it wastes in my drawer, yellow and bent To think that we may have lied down For the stars to witness Whether it’s a comedy or tragedy I cannot say I guess we’ll know at the end of the day Did you catch that good man’s name? He seemed to suffer under a stranger’s gaze And it reminded me again, of the two different kinds of insane But to forget a name! Ah to forget is a luxury that I’m sure most adore Those I’m sure have suffered all the same Living happily in their futures That they’ve planned so meticulously But its alright, its alright I can’t help but give up without a fight As is custom in my ways Though not content to say “certain” or “always” I’d agree to such a whimsical cause Yet when we touch the evening crickets pause My greatest fears are wrapped up inside of you Am I causing you much pain? You sigh along with me, but know it’s true Better than I, as would a host of felines Who sit in basements and tell terrible tales Of ghostly halls and rusty nails A sublime sort of men Reading their Bible verses of Job and Judas Crossing off their puzzles that lie between us But should you walk away It is not yet the end of the day And I would very much like to once more talk Of you and me, and the deep dark walnut tree But while the angels wasted away on the hill They spoke of Hector and his men Though not of the why or the when When the fence posts rotted And the roads broke beneath their feet As they wandered here and there Looking for water from street to street I would’ve helped them if I knew Just to what place they were marching too Wise men always speak of silence Though it were a draught of opiates To dull our senses so we could be more content With the world and its people To give our love from each to each Far from time’s sinister reach As it would whither mountains And bright green summer groves To wash away our hair And tear away our clothes Someone once asked me if I knew And to think they spoke of hate and love And how I never thought of you But was it me? No, I could not commit such fallacy I am not made of courage, not malice Not strength I cannot sing the lyrics you so loved Or measure our hair to any length Yet when you asked me to the riverside And we watched the geese rise with the tide I thought I could enter the room and speak Of poets and soldiers Poets and soldiers We never had a chance to meet But we knew them all the same For we gathered their lives without their fame Violins still play in that our moment But it doesn’t matter enough anymore That you should think on it Or should you linger outside my empty door That connects the rooms of my old house Where my mind's eye once lived So freely As if darkness of before and the light of after Could come together again And not ask of the why or the when So the women they shall come and go And so shall you We will speak every now and then Perhaps of the why and the when If I could paint you a new world I would But those angels on the hill think Less and less about you Or if they could Give life back to themselves So perhaps they’ll know And we’ll know too, when the day is done How long the shadows Can live beneath the dying sun Or how long it will take me To walk from here to you And if I do I would hope that some would stop and see And rest a while to think To journey forth upon the brink Falling back and forth, in and out Counting a million stars, and then none While they catch their breathes One by one |