There once was a place
Where men went
To find a kind
Of temporary content
And many a girl’s face
Graced that place
Where men could buy
A lie
Of love.
But perhaps a few
Believed it was true.
Some poor fools
Tried to buy
Girl’s love
With jewels.
The girls would smile
And would inwardly say,
“He is good
For a while
Until his money runs away”.
Sometimes, girls awaking from sleep
Would weep
And when kindly men
Heard them cry
They would wonder “why
Do I
Try to buy
Her love?”.
Some men would die
Inside and lose all empathy.
For such a He
The payment of a fee
Made everything okay
And he could say
And do
Whatever he wanted to.
Not all girls took drugs
And few had thugs
Keeping them in the life.
But poverty’s sharp knife
May cause us all
To slip and fall.
Some women freely chose
To give a certain part,
(But never their heart)
To men for a fee.
Though some deny
That such women freely chose
Or maintain that she
Is the minority
And that the privileged few
May have true
Freedom, while the majority
Are not free.
The place has long gone
But the profession lives on.
In dark streets
And expensive hotels
Client and girl meet
And the poet tells
How a fee
Often obfuscates morality.
And how all must
End in dust.
And
A disturbing comment on modern society. But an excellent poem.
Thank you, Vivienne. And a belated happy Christmas to you.