Saturday, March 30, 2013

The Charleston Library Society


It was sunset and I had gone back in time.
I had never been in the room before,
but I felt like I had seen it a million times.
The large windows let soft, fading sunlight flood into the room;
the arch above each window almost seemed celestial.
The teal blinds came to a half star shape on the top
and for some reason reminded me of Floridian flamingos.

There seemed to be a window on the ceiling, too.
Light fixtures hung down between each pane,
lighting the room to bring your attention downwards,
yet the windows on the ceiling made me think
that my attention was supposed to somehow go up.

The marble of the original, dated black and white floors
were darker than they probably once were back in the day,
their age becoming more evident on the surface.
Even that carpet under that table there is rather dated.
It has faded into a dark gold-ish brown, the edges fringed.
I wonder how many feet have walked upon these things.

The original structures are still there, too, holding strong.
The old fashioned library system of skinny staircases;
one going down into a mysterious basement below,
the other going up into a strangely giant bookshelf –
or is that simply just a rather small wall?

Portraits hang all around the room, old and dated.
They immortalize the famous strangers that the brush strokes create.
They are posed in a way that tells me nothing of who they
 are,
what success they accomplished, or why it even matters.
There are a lot of busts of these kinds of people, too,
seemingly copper, but I don't know.
Either way, they are black and seem awfully old like this
 setting.

The old desk there sits just like it probably always has.
I feel like there is an absent body in the space behind it.
Some sort of secretary or librarian should be behind its 
greatness.
Maybe with some glasses falling down on her nose,
her hair pulled back loosely in a bun, a few strands around 
her face,
her Mary Jane flats with a black scuff on one side
from where she rushed to save a falling book that afternoon.
Where were the rest of the people that belonged here?

Looking out the door, I saw the distinct view
of a house's sideway porch and a patch of tall sea grass.
But a tourist walked by and made me forget it all.
And then I saw a stain of mildew on the corner of the
 ceiling.
It seems that everything comes to an end.

But I heard a wine bottle open, the cork popping off,
and the smell of alcohol invaded my senses.
Which time was I in again?

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