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An Old Man

At the back of the noisy cafe

bent over a table sits an old man;

a newspaper in front of him, without company.

 

And in the scorn of his miserable old age

he ponders how little he enjoyed the years

when he had strength, and the power of the word, and good looks.

 

He knows he has aged much; he feels it, he sees it.

And yet the time he was young seems

like yesterday. How short a time, how short a time.

 

And he ponders how Prudence deceived him;

and how he always trusted her -- what a folly! --

that liar who said: "Tomorrow. There is ample time."

 

He remembers the impulses he curbed; and how much

joy he sacrificed. Every lost chance

now mocks his senseless wisdom.

 

...But from so much thinking and remembering

the old man gets dizzy. And falls asleep

bent over the cafe table.

c
Written by
Constantine P. Cavafy
1863-1933 / Greek
Lines·Words
18·150
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