Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Shivaree by Paul Cameron Brown
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Shivaree

    By Paul Cameron Brown



        These kettle bells.
        Is it the axe-murderer,
        with green garbage bag
        in the shadows?

        No. Green trees so thick
        their tops are folded hands
        or knotted knuckles
        to make perilous shrubbery
        by the garden wall.

        Yet this is a state of mind
        and shards of multi-coloured
        glass dot the top of stones.
        Interesting. Should a sociopath put
        out his shingle, come calling,
        a much under-estimated, rude uttering
        would take place.

        Still bees are active in the night air,
        not swarms, but a hum. Pleasant odours waft
        thru stiller air. There is no charged electricity
        to things, no tautness or leathery tightness to
        individual seconds. Still and stricken still.

        Yet "what ifs" come slithering
        as if serpents along
        a pasture floor.

        The diabolical. Rich desire to impregnate with evil,
        To embarcation upon conquests.
        To embolden and make one's mark,
        however ridiculous to the sane and balanced mind.
        Horrible. The dirty laundry of just one
        over-flowering and too abundant mind gone wrong.

        One single blossom out of place and "killer".
        Off-kilter. Out of whack. The
        pickle short of a jar syndrome.

        Then there's the hoots and shrill cat-calls
        withered by horse laughs. Guffaws with tattoos and
        rifle-butts.
        Laid back "good ole boys" type of humour going wrong
        soured by too many visits and skunky beers from the
        Orchid Lounge.

        Rinky-dink, honky-tonk. Dotting the landscape with worn,
        thin cars, trouser legs piled up, the "f" and "s" words.

        Charivari. A timely entry. A buzz set to sound, a faint
        blinking button with no sound. Suckers in the creek
        breaking water to catch flies, churning mud bottom
        by their too turbulent tails; a bird hitting the window
        only its night. The echo of moths lost to the stars
        with each jarring knock.



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