I will always think fondly Of the park bench Near the sad man’s statue Whose beard of stone Was sloppily painted By a bunch of overenthusiastic pigeons
That silly park bench Where we first kissed And had our first public argument About nothing at all And at the same time About everything we thought we had
At first our memories Turned the grass greener And the skies bluer And sometimes it seemed That sad man smiled Though it might have been an malevolent grin
But soon it became tainted A symbol of fleeting love Of passion’s mortality Its habit of swiftly disappearing Like cagey, distrustful pigeons And illusions fuelled by sentimentality
Now I understand the sad man And consider his faith to be cruel To want and crave and hope Yet to be sentenced His life writ in stone Near an empty, broken bench