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We'd referred to it as The Avenue, Not because it had any pretense of being Some major thoroughfare (Indeed it ran for no more than a half-dozen blocks From the traffic circle at the school building, Itself de-commissioned for some years now, To the small bluff at the end of the village Where buildings ended and trees and fields began, The view, in our childlike perspective, What we assumed belonged to the birds and angels) But because every other roadway Had been christened with the more plebian "street", And as the longest and straightest pavement It was the venue for racing bicycles, skateboards And anything else with wheels, (As we later discovered, much to our parents' chagrin) And certainly we had sent any number of bugs and beetles To their makers in our mad rush To reach the road's crest, And on one horrific occasion, a tiny bird, Barely past the point of being nurtured in the nest, Somehow became enmeshed in my spokes To be flung unceremoniously to the roadside, It's wings splayed out in a manner At once almost seraphim-like, yet clearly signaling That the hatchling in question (Its species not fully apparent--a pigeon, perhaps, Or a mourning dove not destined to be part of a pair) Would never take flight. I'd looked at it, stunned beyond word or action, When Nicky Gesters pulled up next to me, Whispering into my left ear, *Nothing to be done, kid. Happens all the time.  If it wasn't you, woulda been some cat*. And, bereft of any rationale of my own, I simply nodded, riding back down the slope Not to return to the high end of the road for some days, And when the time comes where some errant wheel, Something rapacious and feline, or some other tool Of life's winds and wuthering take me to my rest, I hope to retain sufficient grace to seek out that bird To proffer my regrets for my all too extant humanity, My sad and insufficient pentinence.
0
Mar 22, 2021
Mar 22, 2021 at 4:14 PM UTC
the rise at the end of golgotha avenue
We'd referred to it as The Avenue, Not because it had any pretense of being Some major thoroughfare (Indeed it ran for no more than a half-dozen blocks From the traffic circle at the school building, Itself de-commissioned for some years now, To the small bluff at the end of the village Where buildings ended and trees and fields began, The view, in our childlike perspective, What we assumed belonged to the birds and angels) But because every other roadway Had been christened with the more plebian "street", And as the longest and straightest pavement It was the venue for racing bicycles, skateboards And anything else with wheels, (As we later discovered, much to our parents' chagrin) And certainly we had sent any number of bugs and beetles To their makers in our mad rush To reach the road's crest, And on one horrific occasion, a tiny bird, Barely past the point of being nurtured in the nest, Somehow became enmeshed in my spokes To be flung unceremoniously to the roadside, It's wings splayed out in a manner At once almost seraphim-like, yet clearly signaling That the hatchling in question (Its species not fully apparent--a pigeon, perhaps, Or a mourning dove not destined to be part of a pair) Would never take flight. I'd looked at it, stunned beyond word or action, When Nicky Gesters pulled up next to me, Whispering into my left ear, *Nothing to be done, kid. Happens all the time.  If it wasn't you, woulda been some cat*. And, bereft of any rationale of my own, I simply nodded, riding back down the slope Not to return to the high end of the road for some days, And when the time comes where some errant wheel, Something rapacious and feline, or some other tool Of life's winds and wuthering take me to my rest, I hope to retain sufficient grace to seek out that bird To proffer my regrets for my all too extant humanity, My sad and insufficient pentinence.
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Mar 22, 2021
Mar 22, 2021 at 4:14 PM UTC
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