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It’s a simple, mundane day, yet busy with an absolute slew of schoolwork I take up a table in the library, high up on the 4th floor, overlooking The shapes below with different work in the same time and place There’s a large model airplane, an early model, Suspended by cables that attach themselves to the far walls, Yielding the illusion of mid-flight It appears I wasn’t the only one with the idea to seclude myself this high; Around me are the detached murmurs of still more students, bent On the conclusion of their labors, some more eager than I, some less so And closer to me, on a juxtaposed table, is another student, about my age Shuffling through what looks like math But I don’t pride myself much on intrusion, so I let him be For hours we all toiled, us in the 4th floor and us down below The music of light concentration, fluttering pages, a utensil, Swathing through those immobile wings and dwindling on the propeller The time is rapidly becoming the enemy in all our bingo books And of the books stacked in the cluster of cases, some of which will no doubt remind one Of the timeless saying that ‘time waits for no one’ The student of the table next to me is still at work, and I’m still at work And people file in and out of the door which leads downstairs, Faces going in with indignance and a foreknowledge of what they’re to do Faces leaving triumphant, secured in another day’s duty crossed off I steal a look at the student close to me I see him pass a tired hand over his eyes (I agree with his plight) By now we’ve been swarmed with a million like us Jumping from table to table to seat to seat, in groups or in respectable solitude A veritable mosaic of people, a timelapse in ironic real-time, elapsed second onto second The darkness crowds the unlucky surfaces of the windows, tries to push in And like lichen stuck to sea rocks amid a terrible tidal storm we remain Jaded and mentally broken down, but finally we see each other He looks at me dully, I return it with a shrug and the slightest smirk And I think we both understand it Though no words needed to pass through the air, nor signals of the eyebrows, The hand, the heavy persistent sigh We’ve seen the lapse, just us and the jetstream of the world unending And he looks away, and I look away at the suspended plane, still as it ever was
0
Feb 11, 2013
Feb 11, 2013 at 10:48 PM UTC
Observations of the 4th Floor
It’s a simple, mundane day, yet busy with an absolute slew of schoolwork I take up a table in the library, high up on the 4th floor, overlooking The shapes below with different work in the same time and place There’s a large model airplane, an early model, Suspended by cables that attach themselves to the far walls, Yielding the illusion of mid-flight It appears I wasn’t the only one with the idea to seclude myself this high; Around me are the detached murmurs of still more students, bent On the conclusion of their labors, some more eager than I, some less so And closer to me, on a juxtaposed table, is another student, about my age Shuffling through what looks like math But I don’t pride myself much on intrusion, so I let him be For hours we all toiled, us in the 4th floor and us down below The music of light concentration, fluttering pages, a utensil, Swathing through those immobile wings and dwindling on the propeller The time is rapidly becoming the enemy in all our bingo books And of the books stacked in the cluster of cases, some of which will no doubt remind one Of the timeless saying that ‘time waits for no one’ The student of the table next to me is still at work, and I’m still at work And people file in and out of the door which leads downstairs, Faces going in with indignance and a foreknowledge of what they’re to do Faces leaving triumphant, secured in another day’s duty crossed off I steal a look at the student close to me I see him pass a tired hand over his eyes (I agree with his plight) By now we’ve been swarmed with a million like us Jumping from table to table to seat to seat, in groups or in respectable solitude A veritable mosaic of people, a timelapse in ironic real-time, elapsed second onto second The darkness crowds the unlucky surfaces of the windows, tries to push in And like lichen stuck to sea rocks amid a terrible tidal storm we remain Jaded and mentally broken down, but finally we see each other He looks at me dully, I return it with a shrug and the slightest smirk And I think we both understand it Though no words needed to pass through the air, nor signals of the eyebrows, The hand, the heavy persistent sigh We’ve seen the lapse, just us and the jetstream of the world unending And he looks away, and I look away at the suspended plane, still as it ever was
Written by
American
Feb 11, 2013
Feb 11, 2013 at 10:48 PM UTC
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