Just a poem about summer nights, how they can feel like the epitome of unfulfilled dreams |
Summer Nights July: Distant voices shouting, Gliding aeroplanes soaring high above, The far-off hum of motor cars. Intermittant noise and clean air. Sometimes there is a rushing sound, The pulse of the world; Transport circulating Like metallic blood in concrete veins and tarmac arteries. I am near the centre. Summer nights, Just before August's heavy humid heat: These are the epitome of unfulfilled longing and Loneliness. Half-baked dreams and unformed plans, Things that I had little intention of doing Hurry through my head Whirling about and Swirling about In a frenzy of burning frustration, Unrecognised for what they are: Just dreams. But still I scheme and plot, Made greedy and desperate by Time's panicky, crushing pressure. Heavy, inexorable, It would suffocate me if it could; Always breathing down my neck. Air, I need air. Gazing across the valley At the luminous, star-filled sky, Diamonds on black velvet. A spangled net of hopeless goals And impossible destinations I am nevertheless calmed. At my open window I inhale promises through dilated nostrils Breathe in potential Suck in prospects Draw them into swelling, gorging lungs, Unaware it will all come to nothing. I am insensible to their false allure; Perhaps Time spoke truer. And suddenly it's September: The far-away sound of skittering wheels on Sparking train tracks, Trains heading off to London. The thrumming sound of a moped Speeding on its way home, Tyres firmly grip the road. Distant voices never get any nearer However hard I listen: I am still alone. No traffic on the streets, No blood in my cold veins, The beat of life is silent. A suburban desert, Devoid of noise Drained of all sounds, life; Nothing. These summer nights: The epitome of unfulfilled longing and lonelines and Dreams |