A poem about two men in suits sitting at the cafe table next to mine. |
SILVER LOCKS Cafe tables set feet, can be worlds apart, depending on who has decided to park their all important self in the chair, and, laughing about a stranger's hair, decide the fate of yet another life, while dreaming in red of their partner's wife. Playing the game til dusk from dawn he'll pay one of us for mowing the lawn surrounding the building he's labelled as home where, when he's there, has to be shown which are his of the kids in the street and where to find the bed where he sleeps with a closed tight mind and two open eyes and every thought dreamt is one more try to find the angle in that game, to win his idea of fortune and fame, and if he doesn't then to place the blame on someone else for dealing the shame that goes with not having a six figure wage, or a daily spot on the society page. The very sugar plums that dance in his head will rot his heart before he's dead and those who think they know him best line up to pin medals on his chest for obeying each of society's rules while quietly marching to the drum of a fool. Dreams are kept out of his daily thoughts scared to death of being caught, laughed at, scorned, and labelled lazy, or, even worse, thought of as crazy, in this world where being sane means getting up early and catching the train, standing proud in your suit and silk thread tie, to hang by the neck until you die. Securely sealed in an airtight box of gleaming bronze with silver locks, there's no spare room for money or things, one size fits all, pawn or king. |