Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
You may look for me on Oxford Street At dawn or dusk or night. Or downtown where the down-and-outs meet To drink and sleep and fight. You may catch my shadow lurking on the curb In the rainy middle-class suburbs. (You’ll be chewing on the cud and on the curd,) And they’ll all think you quite absurd, And pass you by without a word Without a care. You won’t find me. No, I’m not there. You might get a glimpse at sundown Of me and The Sundance Kid, Riding onto Cape Town, Or sliding through Madrid, Or stealing through the byways of Turin – Winking at the bottom of your glass of bitter gin, Breathing through your window, on your skin, Guessing what I think, just like a twin But I swear, You won’t find me, No, I’m not there. Chase my name to the horizon Or the shores of Timbuktu; Just be sure to keep your eyes on Those two feet in-front of you. I’ll be biting at your heels, The stinging citrus scent of the fruit you peel, The whirling hub of your bicycle wheel, The hassock you fall upon when you come to kneel In prayer. But you won’t find me, No, I’m not there. Do not think that I will answer When you ask or shout or call. The figure of the folk dancer Will not be me at all. I’ll be the one that you’re not looking at, Sitting in the place where you just sat, Wiping from my face what you have spat, Sleeping in every dark empty pocket of every new coat that You wear. Oh, you won’t find me, I’m not there. In every crowd and every gathering You will turn around to see That where I am not standing Is not where you want to be. Somewhere between you waking and your sleep I swim the deepest secrets that you keep, Silently catching the tears you weep, In the kitchen cooking the food you eat Minding what you sow you reap! I am one step ahead of a sentient sweet And fair. But you will not find me. I am not there.
0
Mar 5, 2013
Mar 5, 2013 at 2:29 PM UTC
I'm Not There.
You may look for me on Oxford Street At dawn or dusk or night. Or downtown where the down-and-outs meet To drink and sleep and fight. You may catch my shadow lurking on the curb In the rainy middle-class suburbs. (You’ll be chewing on the cud and on the curd,) And they’ll all think you quite absurd, And pass you by without a word Without a care. You won’t find me. No, I’m not there. You might get a glimpse at sundown Of me and The Sundance Kid, Riding onto Cape Town, Or sliding through Madrid, Or stealing through the byways of Turin – Winking at the bottom of your glass of bitter gin, Breathing through your window, on your skin, Guessing what I think, just like a twin But I swear, You won’t find me, No, I’m not there. Chase my name to the horizon Or the shores of Timbuktu; Just be sure to keep your eyes on Those two feet in-front of you. I’ll be biting at your heels, The stinging citrus scent of the fruit you peel, The whirling hub of your bicycle wheel, The hassock you fall upon when you come to kneel In prayer. But you won’t find me, No, I’m not there. Do not think that I will answer When you ask or shout or call. The figure of the folk dancer Will not be me at all. I’ll be the one that you’re not looking at, Sitting in the place where you just sat, Wiping from my face what you have spat, Sleeping in every dark empty pocket of every new coat that You wear. Oh, you won’t find me, I’m not there. In every crowd and every gathering You will turn around to see That where I am not standing Is not where you want to be. Somewhere between you waking and your sleep I swim the deepest secrets that you keep, Silently catching the tears you weep, In the kitchen cooking the food you eat Minding what you sow you reap! I am one step ahead of a sentient sweet And fair. But you will not find me. I am not there.
Written by
Mar 5, 2013
Mar 5, 2013 at 2:29 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem