Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
He gazed at me with his rheumy eyes, ‘You think that you’re getting old! You’ll not go travel that lonely valley Until your bones are cold.’ His voice was like the sound of a rasp Bubbling up through his chest, And his claw-like hands reached out for mine As I backed away from his desk. ‘I see that you won’t come close to me And I can’t blame you for that, This body holds a corrupted soul That’s caught, like a drowning rat. I tasted sin ‘til I’d had my fill When I once was young, like you, I’m twice as old as you think I am At a hundred and twenty two.’ I took a further step from his desk And I let his words sink in, I’d known that he was a billionaire But not that he’d tasted sin. ‘They told me you had the answers, you Could steer me to great success!’ ‘I could, but given your chances, you Should probably aim for less.’ ‘I aimed as high as I thought I could But life only gave me gruel, I wanted to rise as high as the rest But the lack of success was cruel, They passed me by for promotion while The idiots by me flew, I watched them counting their bonuses While the ones that I got were few.’ ‘So envy lies at the heart of it, You think it’s better with wealth, You only can spend a part of it What you really need is health, Your cheeks are ruddy, your eyes are bright You can walk in the winter rain, While I sit crippled with untold wealth In a body that’s racked with pain.’ ‘But you’ve been able to buy the best In a long and a fruitful life, While I’ve been able to give much less At home, to my loving wife.’ ‘At least your woman has stayed by you, She hasn’t been fired by greed, She’s more content than the wives I knew Who wanted more than they need.’ ‘I don’t have even a single friend,’ He said, with a misty eye, ‘But plenty of greedy hangers-on Who are waiting for me to die. I wasn’t warned when I signed the form In blood, that the heart grows cold, That even the love of my children then Could only be bought with gold.’ He shuffled the papers on his desk And pushed one across to me, ‘Just sign on the bottom line in blood And you’ll have everything you see.’ I looked at his ancient, withered form, At the lines in his face of woe, Thought of my wife and children, then: ‘I think I’d better just go!’ David Lewis Paget
0
Sep 29, 2013
Sep 29, 2013 at 5:52 AM UTC
The Valley of Discontent
He gazed at me with his rheumy eyes, ‘You think that you’re getting old! You’ll not go travel that lonely valley Until your bones are cold.’ His voice was like the sound of a rasp Bubbling up through his chest, And his claw-like hands reached out for mine As I backed away from his desk. ‘I see that you won’t come close to me And I can’t blame you for that, This body holds a corrupted soul That’s caught, like a drowning rat. I tasted sin ‘til I’d had my fill When I once was young, like you, I’m twice as old as you think I am At a hundred and twenty two.’ I took a further step from his desk And I let his words sink in, I’d known that he was a billionaire But not that he’d tasted sin. ‘They told me you had the answers, you Could steer me to great success!’ ‘I could, but given your chances, you Should probably aim for less.’ ‘I aimed as high as I thought I could But life only gave me gruel, I wanted to rise as high as the rest But the lack of success was cruel, They passed me by for promotion while The idiots by me flew, I watched them counting their bonuses While the ones that I got were few.’ ‘So envy lies at the heart of it, You think it’s better with wealth, You only can spend a part of it What you really need is health, Your cheeks are ruddy, your eyes are bright You can walk in the winter rain, While I sit crippled with untold wealth In a body that’s racked with pain.’ ‘But you’ve been able to buy the best In a long and a fruitful life, While I’ve been able to give much less At home, to my loving wife.’ ‘At least your woman has stayed by you, She hasn’t been fired by greed, She’s more content than the wives I knew Who wanted more than they need.’ ‘I don’t have even a single friend,’ He said, with a misty eye, ‘But plenty of greedy hangers-on Who are waiting for me to die. I wasn’t warned when I signed the form In blood, that the heart grows cold, That even the love of my children then Could only be bought with gold.’ He shuffled the papers on his desk And pushed one across to me, ‘Just sign on the bottom line in blood And you’ll have everything you see.’ I looked at his ancient, withered form, At the lines in his face of woe, Thought of my wife and children, then: ‘I think I’d better just go!’ David Lewis Paget
david-lewis-paget
Written by
Sep 29, 2013
Sep 29, 2013 at 5:52 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem