A Fatal Proposition Poem by Patti Masterman

A Fatal Proposition

Rating: 5.0


There are only photos left now, of what was
And what is no longer,
Except perhaps for a plat of land,
That marks the telltale spot, only for me.
But I was busy putting roots down there,
In years that seemed more bare, distant,
More long lasting, than any years I’ve seen since.

A man's heart may know things
That it really can't understand,
And a man's mind can wish for things
Which can never make any sense;
And somewhere in between
The knowing and the wishing,
Lies a fleeting kind of sanity.

Some lives I lived might have killed others,
And some days I've known, broken other's spirits.
The world appears a fine and satisfactory place,
Until it starts going away by degrees;
A face, or sometimes just a room, at a time.
But time is the abyss
Where eventually all of us begin to lose parts
Of the identity, of ourselves.

Sometimes, only your thoughts
Can return to what you used to know, by heart.
What a chalice of certainty appears the child
By contrast, to that collector of old shadows, the man.

If we could return only once,
All the things to the way they used to be,
We would perhaps reverse it all,
And thereby vanish, ourselves.

But the more haunting idea back of everything,
Is that perhaps it never really had a separate existence,
Outside of the mind's manipulations.

I fear how it all lives on only inside of us now,
And if that is all that it has ever actually been,
And how life seems at best a fatal proposition, after all.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Georgios Venetopoulos 04 June 2015

Philosophical and inspiring. I read it carefully. Some parts quite a few times. I like it! A deep thinker you are! Good afternoon from my office!

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