Original Work by M. H. J. Peirson
The sun's first light with a deep orange glow
Touched the old man's window
And bathed the room with warm russet tones,
Gently bringing the old man from his slumber.
Easing himself with the small motion
That his paralysis allowed, he gazed at the
Wall and reflected.
And found that he despised the beauty
And splendours of the day,
For, sentenced to live the rest of his life
In that one room, he looked to the night
With joy and to the day with dread.
He drifted idly across the golden waves
Of morning,
And floated aimlessly on the somnolent, silken seas
Of afternoon.
But as the day drew to a close,
And the sun fringed the sky with amber twilight
And the old man's body fell into a torpid sleep,
His spirits rose.
And braced with the vigour and valour of youth
He wandered athletic and unrestricted
In his mind's fantasy.
And yet, as the night drew to a close,
And the sun gently touching the window awoke
The old man,
He fell into the lethargic and apathetic
Existence of day.