a poem

I'm a big believer in the 10% rule: Nine out of every ten people, songs, TV shows, cities, movies, lovers, etc... SUCK. In fact, it's probably more like 9.7 out of 10. When it comes to poetry, it's 9.9 out of 10. Here's one poem I can stand, however Robert Smith/Jean-Paul Sartre/I-used-to-wear-all-black it may be. Besides, any poem with the word racetrack in it is okay in my book.

EXISTENTIAL SONG

Once upon a time
There was a person
Running for his life.
This was his fate.
It was a hard fate.
But Fate is Fate.
He had to keep running.

He began to wonder about Fate
And running for dear life.
Who? Why?
And was he nothing
But some dummy hare on a racetrack!

At last he made up his mind.
He was nobody's fool.
It would take guts
But yes he could do it.
Yes yes he could stop.
Agony! Agony
Was the wrenching
Of himself from his running.
Vast! And sudden
The stillness
In the empty middle of the desert.

There he stood -- stopped.
And since he coulnd't see anybody
To North or to West or to East or to South
He raised his fists
Laughing in awful joy
And shook them at the Universe

And his fists fell off
And his arms fell off
He staggered and his legs fell off

It was too late for him to realize
That this was the dogs tearing him to pieces
That he was, in fact, nothing
But a dummy hare on a racetrack

And life was being lived only by the dogs.

     --Ted Hughes


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