The Ghent Review Volume1, Number 1, summer 2016 | Page 26

It is as if death is unappeased in this place Or that beauty has died at the hand of anger. Young man: Now you’re are talking in riddles Or rambling with words the way we ramble This countryside day and night. The twisting roads have twisted your mind You were reluctant to come to this place But insisted that we come to this place You’re a contradiction to yourself As much as you are to me. Old man: Old men have prerogatives which young men do not. If I twist and turn it is because of a memory Which can never rest easy in my heart. Nor is my mind Better equipped to handle it. Say what you will About my state yet even though I don’t want to be here This is where I must be. Young man: Must be, must be What must be for the two of us Travelling these roads and seeking shelter? Old man: I’m looking for more than shelter I’m looking for an answer to a vision That has troubled me for twenty years Which I hope will be resolved this night A face, neither male nor female, a face of tragic androgenic beauty, stylized, slowly appears out of the green and brown shrubbery, holds there a few seconds, then slowly disappears again back into it again Old man: There! Did you see it? Young man: