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The Gallows.

Ring-doves with stoles as black as ice, constrained by priestly cloth, flew oblivious to our delights, blotting the evening sun. As rooks adorned The Gallows frame, with limbs demure and frail, bleak spectres stalked the shadows nigh, their faces gaunt and pale. You sought a comfort truly base, on rocks far to the west, thatched dwellings stirring distantly, the town it would not rest. For fear of the malicious one that steals both young and aged: The Gallows wait, their slender necks, like brittle coppice gates.
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Written by
thomas-gabriel-1
Published
Feb 15, 2012
Lines·Words
23·86
Notes

My first and only foray into rhyme, also the only poem i've ever written inspired by a piece of art - Bruegel's Magpie on the Gallows

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