Poetic Divination | In the Stalls

“In the Stalls” by Arthur Symons

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.