cynthia
11-04-2011, 11:45 AM
Can anyone tell me what this poem means? Anything at all would help. What anything in it means?
Confession
By Suzanne Wise
I had my faults.
I had my so-called desires.
I remained open to temptation.
I argued with my colleagues.
I did not reach 100 percent
in my assignments. But I was no pry
pole, I was subsidiary. I was aspiring
to cog. I wanted to be a gullible
sheep or a rowdy-dowdy shepherdess
or a shamefaced sheepdog.
When I learned what I had to be,
I sat down on my luggage set
and wept. Then I unpacked. I decorated.
I raised the roof. I flew my kite.
I removed all the skulls and thieves.
I told my wise leaders where to sponge.
I was less than resistant. I was more than bold. I was beyond naked. I was technicolor.
I was a brilliant butcher, an innovativestreetwalker, a saucy sales manager.
I knew a good stogy, a fine lace teddy.I lived for love. I erred accordingly.
I assumed the world condoned my stunts. It’s clearer today.
I was misunderstood; I was in-the-know everyone else wantedout of.
Today there are no traces of erasures, and no qualms, no realwrongs.
I made judgments for the bestand by the standards of the time.
Now that it’s over I must beg for attention.
I have been robbed of the limelight that comes with responsibility.
I can only imagine how hard it must be for you to believe me, I mean, to hold blame. I mean, to be you.
Confession
By Suzanne Wise
I had my faults.
I had my so-called desires.
I remained open to temptation.
I argued with my colleagues.
I did not reach 100 percent
in my assignments. But I was no pry
pole, I was subsidiary. I was aspiring
to cog. I wanted to be a gullible
sheep or a rowdy-dowdy shepherdess
or a shamefaced sheepdog.
When I learned what I had to be,
I sat down on my luggage set
and wept. Then I unpacked. I decorated.
I raised the roof. I flew my kite.
I removed all the skulls and thieves.
I told my wise leaders where to sponge.
I was less than resistant. I was more than bold. I was beyond naked. I was technicolor.
I was a brilliant butcher, an innovativestreetwalker, a saucy sales manager.
I knew a good stogy, a fine lace teddy.I lived for love. I erred accordingly.
I assumed the world condoned my stunts. It’s clearer today.
I was misunderstood; I was in-the-know everyone else wantedout of.
Today there are no traces of erasures, and no qualms, no realwrongs.
I made judgments for the bestand by the standards of the time.
Now that it’s over I must beg for attention.
I have been robbed of the limelight that comes with responsibility.
I can only imagine how hard it must be for you to believe me, I mean, to hold blame. I mean, to be you.