Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
singer sang, from some open mic on Broadway, in Nashville, or any remnant city, you may remember witnessing at night, looking out on rain slicked pavement, reflecting stoplights and neon, before the advent of mega-light emitting diodic messages urging any eye to pay a glance, take chance adventure into ignorance of the street glistening in August rain, unaware the singer singing I imagine I imagined singin' in this bar. Across the street from Pinkies, which was just behind the Ryman, temple of my working class spirit that won the west, when we paved paradise, and left yesterday in the dust, or so we was told, So some unknown singer sang to an empty room, but for the barkeep, there, and me, listening from floor four of the empty old furniture store at the corner of fourth and Broadway, in Nashville, or any remnant city, with an empty building available to bums, in 1973. Where singers at open mics sang on Tuesday nights. Singer sang, I imagined I was all I imagine that I am, and it seems I can be if I make up my mind. or so it seems so It seems I can be a singer in the spotlight, on any given night, when nothin' matters any where when nothin' matters any where when nothin' matters any where, and I don't care. -- a remnant of a moment in any remnant city still haunting my / thy coulda beens, had we agreed it worth the effort to realize in time.
0
Aug 17, 2020
Aug 17, 2020 at 4:42 PM UTC
Remnant of a rainy night in August '73
singer sang, from some open mic on Broadway, in Nashville, or any remnant city, you may remember witnessing at night, looking out on rain slicked pavement, reflecting stoplights and neon, before the advent of mega-light emitting diodic messages urging any eye to pay a glance, take chance adventure into ignorance of the street glistening in August rain, unaware the singer singing I imagine I imagined singin' in this bar. Across the street from Pinkies, which was just behind the Ryman, temple of my working class spirit that won the west, when we paved paradise, and left yesterday in the dust, or so we was told, So some unknown singer sang to an empty room, but for the barkeep, there, and me, listening from floor four of the empty old furniture store at the corner of fourth and Broadway, in Nashville, or any remnant city, with an empty building available to bums, in 1973. Where singers at open mics sang on Tuesday nights. Singer sang, I imagined I was all I imagine that I am, and it seems I can be if I make up my mind. or so it seems so It seems I can be a singer in the spotlight, on any given night, when nothin' matters any where when nothin' matters any where when nothin' matters any where, and I don't care. -- a remnant of a moment in any remnant city still haunting my / thy coulda beens, had we agreed it worth the effort to realize in time.
What if why not has nothing to say in the matter. We make do, duty bound to imagine being a link to no problem at all, in terms of reality after ever begins where you are.
kenpepiton
Written by
77/M/Pine Valley CA
Aug 17, 2020
Aug 17, 2020 at 4:42 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem