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A lonely man's thoughts about a life wasting away. |
| The Lonely Man Whiskey and beer are the chains holding me here. Roads and rails have no interest to me; the corner tavern has my soul, won’t let me go. My prime was years ago and I had nothing to fear. Now, just a ragged suitcase holds my life, gathering dust in a squalid room, carrying only memories. Alone, no family or friends, they’re all forgotten. A slow cancer eats my remaining time, payment for a choking smoke, but still I light. I hate the park in day, there’s no drinking allowed. A playground for women and children while the tavern sleeps till noon and I want to die. There’s a man on the street offering me eternal life; he promised redemption, but no booze. Imagine heaven: all those bums, especially me. Next to drinking, I like sitting at my room’s window, observing, feeling lucky that I’m not one of those poor souls tied to jobs. Too independent. Today’s my sixty first birthday; it seems a lot longer. Nobody knows. So what? And who cares? Maybe that guy in the street offering salvation? |