Grey days recede into dreary, drizzling dusks Baptismal rains across the windows slip And even the candlelight is not proof Against the gathering gloom of heartfall
Shakespeare leans uncertainly on the shelf And agonizes over his writerβs block Milton is writing yet another tract On faith while smoking Players cigarettes
Warnie and Jack are out for a brisk walk And Tollers is busy correcting proofs Under a yellow puddle of lamplight Bleak Spenser in his grief Kilcolman weeps
We all hold castles abandoned and burnt Friendships grown mouldy, squabbles unresolved Walks not taken, rough drafts uncorrected Pipes gone quite out, cups of tea gotten cold
Has it been that long since I saw you last? Come in; Iβll put the kettle on for tea Just leave your coat and brolly by the door Come sit by the fire; come, and talk with me
(In my part of the world that last paragraph is an alien. There are no brollies and seldom tea; the milieu is one of cheap beer, illegal drugs, high unemployment, squalor, violence, diffuse anger, and existential despair, but I try to be optimistic.)