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At a Table in Muddy Waters
from The Greek Anthology, Book XVII
Three women talk about their men, boyfriends,
             crushes. Each looks beautiful.
One wears a ponytail and the tattoo of a star
             on her wrist; another has shower-wet hair
scented with hyacinth, the third one sews
            (surely Clotho) without a glance at her handiwork.
They take no notice of me at a nearby café table,
             invisible as a cab driver – my hair thinning.
Clotho says of one beau: “I’m really not gone
            on him. He’s too nice.” Said in earnest,
no irony intended. The others nod, don’t laugh.
             I wish I had been privy to this conversation
thirty years ago. I, who was always fallen over myself
             being nice to women I most longed for,
hardly ever ended up with. If only I’d known. 

– Gregory of Corkus