Where are the Colours?
a poem
My front door was red
when I was eight years old.
Twenty years on, though faded and worn
its still the same colour its always been
but I don’t see red.
/
I stopped seeing colours with crisp lines
when cars stopped staying in their lanes.
I stopped asking why the sky was blue
when I noticed it spent more time being grey,
or settled into inky black, purple too
It wasn’t just blue.
It’s never just blue.
/
Maybe the man on the street
was not a failure in his tent.
Though the trees lost their leaves
it was mild enough to stay in the open air
where he could breathe.
/
I spied him from my rooftop,
saw he watched just like me
and knew most fervently
that he possessed the better view.
If a question drifted down from a height
the man might hear,
Where do you see the reds and the blues?
***
Thanks for reading!
Here's another, if you'd like:
About the Creator
Bugsy Watts
Got bit by the writing bug.

Comments (1)
Thoughtful, Bugsy.