Wednesday Sonnet: The Actor to the Audience
By john_silver
Wed, 21 Apr 2010
- 711 reads
1 comments
When I still had the sunlight in my hair
I thought the gods of theatre had misspelt
My stage directions; was I Caesar’s heir?
I did not feel the quiet others felt
To still the drops of rage behind my head,
Nor was I ever known to pass unshaken
Those melancholic walls which stood like lead
Between the stage and backstage: was I craven?
Today I know the stage and back are one,
Their masks of private / public fold in me
Until I breathe the theatre’s dust, and run
Its Acts over my heart (as scenery).
I do not have the script to fight your jeers,
Young men: only these Apollonian tears.
- Log in to post comments
Comments
I think I get the mood of
I think I get the mood of the theatre here and the young aspiring player as Shakespeare would have it
- Log in to post comments