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I. I used to be a crocodile. I knew no risks, no tears, no joy no excitement to lure me above water, no work, for it was cut out for me in the shallows with the small fish, no heavens to make up for, no hells to hope for, no soul to shatter on mid-spring days when all life is but a nightmare and clouds are all but ******* on my head, who granted to desired effect that siren hoped for, who sits upon the sandy shore and whispers sweet songs to me, myself evolved, and repeats me back the songs I taught her, "Over and over again," she mocks. How Neptune did churn his waters to beach a loveless Odysseus here shall ever be unbeknownst to me. But beeswax I have fixed in my ears, but now I cannot hear my other friends in the trees. but once I make my flight from this island, away from the crocodiles, and starvation, and sirens, I will take it out, and I will hear! by God! I will hear and be heard! II. No sound. The siren's lips move; the water recedes. the sky grays. the crocodiles come. I am drawn near by her lotus lips that bid me down this tree but I must not dismount. but a second siren in the trees has been picking out my beeswax. Two songs. The reptiles draw ever nearer to the siren, her song is the loudest. The second siren sings a song of warning                              and captivation.                I dismount the tree to fight back the green menace, and save the first siren. I knew these fellows once. They were my friends, and now do I slay them. I see only jaws and red blood now, and now am I defeated. The crocodile has taken her as prey, so familiarly, for I was a crocodile once.
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Jan 23, 2011
Jan 23, 2011 at 9:06 AM UTC
The Siren's Isle
I. I used to be a crocodile. I knew no risks, no tears, no joy no excitement to lure me above water, no work, for it was cut out for me in the shallows with the small fish, no heavens to make up for, no hells to hope for, no soul to shatter on mid-spring days when all life is but a nightmare and clouds are all but ******* on my head, who granted to desired effect that siren hoped for, who sits upon the sandy shore and whispers sweet songs to me, myself evolved, and repeats me back the songs I taught her, "Over and over again," she mocks. How Neptune did churn his waters to beach a loveless Odysseus here shall ever be unbeknownst to me. But beeswax I have fixed in my ears, but now I cannot hear my other friends in the trees. but once I make my flight from this island, away from the crocodiles, and starvation, and sirens, I will take it out, and I will hear! by God! I will hear and be heard! II. No sound. The siren's lips move; the water recedes. the sky grays. the crocodiles come. I am drawn near by her lotus lips that bid me down this tree but I must not dismount. but a second siren in the trees has been picking out my beeswax. Two songs. The reptiles draw ever nearer to the siren, her song is the loudest. The second siren sings a song of warning                              and captivation.                I dismount the tree to fight back the green menace, and save the first siren. I knew these fellows once. They were my friends, and now do I slay them. I see only jaws and red blood now, and now am I defeated. The crocodile has taken her as prey, so familiarly, for I was a crocodile once.
Copyright January 2011 by Victor Thorn
victor-thorn
Written by
American
Jan 23, 2011
Jan 23, 2011 at 9:06 AM UTC
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