Ill Lit Blues
The lights come on so early on these winter
afternoons;
The darkness creeps up early, winter afternoons,
And somewhere a piano is picking out a musty
tune.
With less than an explanation you have taken
your liberty
And arranged without thinking that nobody else
but me
Will be sitting here in the dark like a granite
effigy.
Well, no use complaining, there are a million
people like me,
And everything as usual is exactly what it must
be:
Character is fate, they say—I'm sure that you
agree.
And they say love is easy as the turning of a
page—
Haven't you heard that, honey?—like the turning
of a page?
But they mumble something different in the back
rooms of old age.
I'm not a first-time loser, I've been down this
road before,
And once again I find myself standing outside a
door;
But even as I spell it out, I still don't know
the score.
Yet the truth is plain as day, love, all you
need do is look;
I can see it clear as daylight, saw it in your
parting look—
Love is a sudden emptiness like the closing of a
book.
Robert Mezey
From
Collected Poems: 1952-1999, University of
Arkansas
Press, ©
2000. Reprinted by permission of the author. |