My life is like a music-hall,
Where, in the impotence of rage,
Chained by enchantment to my stall,
I see myself upon the stage
Dance to amuse a music-hall.
'Tis I that smoke this cigarette,
Lounge here, and laugh for vacancy,
And watch the dancers turn; and yet
It is my very self I see
Across the cloudy cigarette.
My very self that turns and trips,
Painted, pathetically gay,
An empty song upon the lips
In make-believe of holiday:
I, I, this thing that turns and trips!
The light flares in the music-hall,
The light, the sound, that weary us;
Hour follows hour, I count them all,
Lagging, and loud, and riotous:
My life is like a music-hall.
In The Stalls
Arthur Symons
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Poem topics: believe, dance, song, holiday, laugh, stage, sound, watch, life, light, music, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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In The Stalls is a poem by Arthur Symons. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
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