He looked out
He looked out
On a street much like any other
The everyday of its appearance
The impromptu greeting
Of morning
The fleeting moments of passers-by
None meeting his eye.
So much of the space is taken up
With the noise of bustle,
The activity of strangers
Sometimes he forgot
What he was doing
Why he was there
Vaguely disconcerted
Aware that
Something was missing
Lurking in the corner
Of his peripheral vision
The blank extremities
Of his existence
Where some of his memories
Slumbered
Cobwebbed
Mothballed
Wharehoused
As if they were curiosities
Of an industrial era
Deeply driven undercover.
Lost in a sea fret,
A fog of forgetfulness
Clouding his judgement
With nobody to remind him
What he was supposed to do
A living museum
A repository of insufficient worth.
He stood on the balcony
With a blank expression
Trying to remember why he
Came to be there
He should be doing something
But what
He couldn’t say