Black TideA Poem by David Lewis PagetI
never was one for warnings Never
could see the way ahead, I
always thought that the dawn would bring Glad
tidings to my bed, The
sky lit up and the stars went out As
the sun came up each day, And
so it would for a million years, Or
so I heard them say. The
grass was green and the sky was blue And
the earth a dirty brown, Nothing
was going to change my view While
the earth and the stars went round, Each
day had followed the day before The
months were bundled in years, And
if I wished I could draw them out Like
the coins in a long-loved purse. Then
you walked onto my palette brush, Were
painted into my life, I’d
never seen beauty such as yours That
hadn’t been someone’s wife, You
said your name was Ophelia And
you took me on for a ride, While
friends had muttered aside to me, ‘Beware
of the long Black Tide!’ I
couldn’t see it, I never could, To
me you were just a dream, Your
star had lit up my neighbourhood But
nothing was what it seemed, You
borrowed money from everyone With
a smile and a ‘thank you, Jack,’ And
spent in rivers that rose in flood But
I had to pay it back. Your
smile was a smile for every man But
the women had seen you through, They
caught you out when you held a hand Beneath
a table or two, The
days when you said you’d stayed at home With
a fever, taken a pill, I
swallowed, while you were out to roam, You
said you’d been feeling ill. Then
often I saw your eyes were bright Though
your speech was a little slurred, I
thought you had drunk too much that night, You’d
stop, you gave me your word, The
laughter grew a bit wilder, and The
parties you went to, gay, I
couldn’t keep up with that side of you, I
had to work by the day. I
felt that a tide was rising, that Was
colouring everything black, The
world was a sad and grimmer place As
you slowly turned your back, I’d
fret as the conversation died And
you made each lame excuse, As
rumours brought the conclusion that All
that you were was loose. One
night you rode on a Harley, with Your
scarf adrift in the breeze, On
the back of a bike with Charlie With
your skirt up, showing your knees, You
waved and laughed as you passed me by And
clung to the fellow’s back, He
took you down to the woodlands there Along
the old farmer’s track. They
phoned the news in the morning, I Was
shaken, pale and tense, For
he was impaled on the handlebars And
you on a barbed wire fence, I
knew that you had been lost to me When
you went on that final ride, And
the gorge had risen to choke me like The
surge of a long Black Tide. My
heart is grey and it’s leaden, while The
land is riven with drought, The
sky is grey and forbidding, since The
stars in the sky went out, The
days still follow the days before But
there’s darkness here inside, And
I ponder more as I walk the shore On
the number of times you lied! David
Lewis Paget © 2013 David Lewis PagetFeatured Review
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18 Reviews Added on February 4, 2013 Last Updated on February 4, 2013 Tags: beauty, borrowed, lost.impaled Author
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