You may have heard the remark on occasion, “Oh I would love to have been a fly on the wall in that room.” Well, back in my college days I spent some time considering that idea, and ended up writing the following poem about it. I ran across it the other day while going through some old papers in the basement and thought I’d put it up here. Hope you enjoy it.
Ode to a Fly
Secrets told by little girls
Dreams of love and gifted pearls
Men combine and plans create
Designs to rule, their passions hate
The discoveries that shape our lives
Forgotten pacts of old
The artist creates his masterpiece
An embrace two lovers hold
These things take place behind closed doors
No secrets to reveal
Yet watchful eyes these acts do see
And secrets quietly steal
Oh, omniscient eyes, pervading all
How dearly I long to learn
The wonders of your vigilance
The truths you can discern
Absolutely inconspicuous
Such advantage do you know
The world so carelessly to view
Yet never yourself to show
Yet as I look into those eyes
There is something more I see
A frustration I can’t comprehend
A longing to be free
I ask the eyes to please explain
Whence comes their agony
My lot, dear friend, the eyes reply
Is one of great irony
The world is mine to view, ‘tis true
And no wall can block my sight
But for all the ways I know to win
I must always sit out the fight
The world, with the knowledge I possess
Would know its ills no more
The wisdom is mine, but not to share
I am rich, but I am also poor
I left the eyes in flurried though
As my envy lost its sting
And a thought, as though from trumpets blast
Started in my ears to ring
‘Tis better to live with ignorance
And change that which I might
Than the answer for all wrongs to know
And hold no power to make it right.
This poem is very insightful. It sparked a conversation with some friends of mine. Are knowing secrets worth the trade-off of subjecting oneself to the means of obtaining them?
Deep and well written,
Curtis J. Morley