Deeply Morbid

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Deeply morbid deeply morbid was the girl who typed the letters
Always out of office hours running with her social betters 
But when daylight and the darkness of the office closed about her
Not for this ah not for this her office colleagues came to doubt her
It was that look within her eye
Why did it always seem to say goodbye?

Joan her name was and at lunchtime 
Solitary solitary
She would go and watch the pictures 
In the National Gallery
All alone all alone
This time with no friend beside her 
She would go and watch the pictures 
All alone.

Will she leave her office colleagues
Will she leave her evening pleasures
Toil within a friendly bureau
Running later in her leisure?
All alone all alone
Before the pictures she seems turned to stone.

Close upon the Turner pictures 
Closer than a thought may go 
Hangs her eye and all the colours 
Leap into a special glow
All for her, all alone
All for her, all for Joan.

First the canvas where the ocean 
Like a mighty animal
With a really wicked motion 
Leaps for sailors’ funeral

Holds her panting. Oh the creature 
Oh the wicked virile thing
With its skin of fleck and shadow 
Stretching tightening over him.
Wild yet captured wild yet captured 
By the painter, Joan is quite enraptured.

Now she edges from the canvas 
To another loved more dearly 
Where the awful light of purest 
Sunshine falls across the spray, 
There the burning coasts of fancy 
Open to her pleasure lay.
All alone, all alone
Come away, come away
All alone.

Lady Mary, Lady Kitty
The Honourable Featherstonehaugh 
Polly Tommy from the office
Which of these shall hold her now? 
Come away, come away
All alone.

The spray reached out and sucked her in 
It was a hardly noticed thing 
That Joan was there and is not now
(Oh go and tell young Featherstonehaugh) 
Gone away, gone away 
All alone.

She stood up straight
The sun fell down
There was no more of London Town 
She went upon the painted shore 
And there she walks for ever more 
Happy quite
Beaming bright
In a happy happy light
All alone.

They say she was a morbid girl, no doubt of it 
And what befell her clearly grew out of it 
But I say she’s a lucky one
To walk for ever in that sun
And as I bless sweet Turner’s name
I wish that I could do the same.

© Stevie Smith