Stay a while longer
Why are you here?
Did you expect my words to be your pain
painted on walls in this industrial town?
Like Bansky but cheap?
I’m not that good, but stay with me for a while.
Have you sat on the verge for so long
you halfway live on the other side by now?
Do you no longer recall the smell of the sea,
but you dream of it at times,
when the static in your head has you tuning out
and you watch the world through glass,
waiting maybe for a ride
into the vast colourless distance
beneath unending colourless skies.
Are you shivering?
Do you leave the radio on at night?
We’re both sleeping on train rails
in the days after Christmas, so let me hold your hand.
I’m not good at it, but your fingers are cold,
and so are mine.
Do you feel a draught in every room
from the place that is now empty
to the fissure in your heart,
where the haze is seeping in?
I know about the days when the world slips out of grasp
and your body cannot move,
and you crouch down on the ground.
I will sit there with you.
Simple.
I don’t know your name,
but I’ve forgotten mine along the way anyhow.
Maybe we’ll find new names one day,
or we’ll find our old ones,
primal, as they were
before ballpoint pens wrote them down
in the annals of this sordid establishment.
What I’m saying is
At times we both dangle our feet over the abyss.
But take my hand, or better yet
I’ll take yours,
and we’ll stay here a while longer.
I hear there’s a bakery if you walk the other way.
It’s not much but
there’s a lonely cat along the road,
and the smell of bread is filling,
and the old lady knows stories
about the fisherfolk and the sea,
and she’ll make tea,
basil and thyme,
likely a bit bitter
and a bit warming all the same,
and we can stay there for another while.