| It is neither fair nor reasonable to expect sadness
|
| To confine itself to it’s causes. |
| Like a river in flood
|
| When it subsides and the drowned bodies of Animals have been deposited in the treetops, there is Another kind of damage that takes place beyond the torrent
|
| At first, it seemed as though she had only left
|
| The room to go into the garden and had been delayed by stray
|
| Chickens in the corn. |
| Then he had thought she might
|
| Have eloped with the rodeo-boy from the neighbouring
|
| Property but it wasn’t till one afternoon, when he Had heard guitar playing coming from her room and
|
| Had rushed upstairs to confront her and had seen
|
| That it was only the wind in the curtains brushing
|
| Against the open strings, that he finally knew she
|
| Wasn’t coming back. |
| He had dealt with the deluge alright
|
| But the watermark of her leaving was still quite visible
|
| He had resorted to the compass then, thinking that
|
| Geography might rescue him but after one week in the
|
| Victorian Alps he came back north, realising that snow which
|
| He had never seen before, was only frozen water
|
| I’ll take you to Hollywood
|
| I’ll take you to Mexico
|
| I’ll take you anywhere the
|
| River of Money flows
|
| I’ll take you to Hollywood
|
| I’ll take you to Mexico
|
| I’ll take you anywhere the
|
| River of Money flows
|
| But was it really possible for him to cope with the
|
| Magnitude of her absence? |
| The snow had failed him
|
| Bottles had almost emptied themselves without effect
|
| The television, a samaritan during other tribulations, had
|
| Been repossessed. |
| She had left her travelling clock
|
| Though thinking it incapable of funcitioning in Another time-zone; |
| so the long vacant days of expensive sunlight
|
| Were filled with the sound of her minutes, with the measuring of Her hours |