Mercy me, the night is long. Take my pen, to write you this song.
Lord: is it harder to carry on, or to know when you are done?
All my life, I've felt as though I'm inside a beautiful memory, replaying with the sound turned down low.
Long-life, show your face. Slow-heart, curb your taste. Smoke me out of my hiding place. Long-life, state your case.
What in the world are we waiting for — building glowing cities along the shore, where the wind batters in, baiting my kin like a matador?
So much value, placed upon what lies just beyond our plans: waving my handkerchief, running along, till the end of the sand.
Long-life, speak your name. I'm so tired of the guessing game. But, something is moving, just out of frame: Slow-heart, brace and aim.
Breaching slowly, across the sea, one mast — a flash, like the stinger of a bee — to take you away, a swarming fleet is gonna take you from me.
The universe is getting loose: sodden spread, from some leaden disuse, rushing, unhinged, toward diminishing lights, like a headless caboose.
I'll wait for you, alongside the ocean, and make do with my no-skin. But then, Long-life, will you let me in? And then, Slow-heart, are you gonna know him? Long-life, speak your name. I wait, while I decry the wait. And when I die, may I relate: Slow heart, congregate.
To leave your home, and your family, for some distortion of property? Well, darling, I can't go. But you may stay here, with me.