Poem: The Man Whose Luck Is Always Against Him

The Man Whose Luck Is Always Against Him

does not see one event
then another, but a pattern
where all things blend
together.
  
It must not bethat this bad thing happened
here, but that bad one
is separate.
  
They mustbe one thing, all of it
must be one thing,
or why is it always
happening.
  
To seeoneself at the center
always of disaster, it
is inevitable to think
it must be for a reason,
there must be a connection,
a cause.
  
But who canfind reason for such a thing?
It is not there, is only
a series of events, separate
acts with independent
outcomes that strangely,
inexplicably, have aligned
into a series of misfortunes.
If only it were easy to see
them as separate
when it is your own
bad luck.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Poem: Neighborhood Inhabitants

A Writer's Notebook, One-Thousand-Eight-Hundred-And-Seventy-Three

A Writer's Notebook, Day One-Thousand-One-Hundred-And-Thirty-Three