A short poem |
All the Beautiful Things It was outside that I suddenly realized, While imagining my father walking up And sharing a cigarette with me underneath the scaffolding, That no one can explain what we are not And I cannot remember what his love felt like- Maybe there was never a time like that. Dreaming, in this pale room That when I walked in reminded me of when I was looking up At the ceiling of St. Peters’ where God was the farthest idea from my mind, is the closest I will ever be to him again. My youth ended when you left me Bleeding and crying on a bathroom floor And I looked down and back at all I’d done Wondering if you would have stayed if I was beautiful. The only thing that keeps me off the dirty floor And the thing that keeps the scars healing Is a hope that if I become old, I will understand And then, finally want to stop dreaming of you. And my father, like every girls’ Is older but he is no wiser Because if age brought explanations Then I think we all might live forever. But when I saw my father cry about his love, Who was beautiful and whom he lost years ago, It makes me think age will only steal from me All the beautiful things that make me alive. If this feeling of lost love lasts longer that I do Then I think I should return without regrets and tears To find the fountain of youth that’s hidden in the bathroom By stealing from age all the beautiful things that it wants most. |