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Perhaps it was her voice itself, clear and simple, Unalloyed by any classically trained fol-de-rol, Or possibly the nature of her faith Displayed with such clarity, such transparency By that very instrument, But in any case, she had utterly bewitched the populace Of the place known as Ahwaga by her distant cousins, And when she stood on the Delaware & Hudson platform The next morning, they had cheered her lustily, All but begging her You must return to us, But the train had lost its footing on a sharp grade Mere hundreds of yards before making the station at Deposit, And she was lost in the carnage and conflagration. The townspeople she had said her farewells to that morning Were distraught, their feelings a mix of grief And an odd sense of culpability, a nagging misgiving That perhaps this was an omen, some augury Denoting that their own faith was not up to scratch, And so they had taken her back to their own burgh To bury her in a manner befitting her piety (She had been travelling with siblings, But they acquiesced to the plan, though how willingly Not wholly apparent at the time, And made no clearer through the ramble of time) And so she was laid to rest in a plot Surrounded by ornate fencing, her grave marked By an obelisk pointing unambiguously to her Heaven, And it is said that, on autumn evenings When the breeze rustle the dying leaves just so, You can hear the spirits of her Mohawk brethren Come down from Quebec, murmuring songs Telling of the spirits living in the trees and hedgerows, Spoken in the ancient tongue Of the languid, unhurried Susquehanna far below.
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Jan 29, 2018
Jan 29, 2018 at 8:37 PM UTC
The Obelisk For Sa-Sa-Na Loft
Perhaps it was her voice itself, clear and simple, Unalloyed by any classically trained fol-de-rol, Or possibly the nature of her faith Displayed with such clarity, such transparency By that very instrument, But in any case, she had utterly bewitched the populace Of the place known as Ahwaga by her distant cousins, And when she stood on the Delaware & Hudson platform The next morning, they had cheered her lustily, All but begging her You must return to us, But the train had lost its footing on a sharp grade Mere hundreds of yards before making the station at Deposit, And she was lost in the carnage and conflagration. The townspeople she had said her farewells to that morning Were distraught, their feelings a mix of grief And an odd sense of culpability, a nagging misgiving That perhaps this was an omen, some augury Denoting that their own faith was not up to scratch, And so they had taken her back to their own burgh To bury her in a manner befitting her piety (She had been travelling with siblings, But they acquiesced to the plan, though how willingly Not wholly apparent at the time, And made no clearer through the ramble of time) And so she was laid to rest in a plot Surrounded by ornate fencing, her grave marked By an obelisk pointing unambiguously to her Heaven, And it is said that, on autumn evenings When the breeze rustle the dying leaves just so, You can hear the spirits of her Mohawk brethren Come down from Quebec, murmuring songs Telling of the spirits living in the trees and hedgerows, Spoken in the ancient tongue Of the languid, unhurried Susquehanna far below.
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Jan 29, 2018
Jan 29, 2018 at 8:37 PM UTC
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