quiet apologies
Apologia in Free Verse (After Too Much Metre)
I meant to speak plainly. To let the thought go unbuttoned,
leaned against a kitchen chair, talking about traffic
or the way light hits the linoleum.
But then—I rhymed.
By accident or reflex or loneliness.
It was you that made me do it—
not out of guilt, but because the sentence curled
toward music, and I didn’t stop it.
You rolled your eyes. I apologised.
And still the phrases rang like pewter spoons.
There’s something in me that keeps folding
speech into couplets, as if silence
might forgive it easier when dressed in echo.
So no—I wasn’t trying to impress you.
I was just afraid the truth, unmetred,
might sound too sharp when said aloud.
David RL Moore
Wed 25th Jun 2025 23:07
Brilliant Poem,
This is a struggle musical poets wrestle with endlessly.
I vomit at my rhyme, often.
The cutting edge of non-conformative unbridled words shears through centuries of pleasurable weaselly obeyance.
I applaud your disregard most heartily.
David RL Moore