Someone told me, once,
that poetry is a window to the soul,
a glimpse into the very depths
of another human being.
If that's true,
then I wonder at the color of my soul.
It can't be blue, like the sky,
a color that is far too innocent and kind
for me now. The same with green and
yellow, the colors of flowers and life.
I am too dark inside, much too dark;
the window that peers inside my soul is
too dirty, smudged by the fingerprints of
those already come and gone,
blackened by the grime
I can never seem to wash away.
No, my soul can be none of these
bright colors: not red or orange
or even purple. And not pink, never pink.
All that leaves for my soul are the
monochromatic shades: black and white—
and brown, none of which, in their purest forms
seem quite fitting.
I suppose my soul must be
a mixture of all three, not black
or white or even brown, but rather
some murky shade—like pond water
almost, but dimmer,
what I always imagined as
the color of shame.