Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
December, 1870 After the beef was gone, after the pork and the lamb, and the fowl and the fish and the dogs, and the cats, and the rats in the gutter, the butchers turned to the zoo. We ate the wolves. We ate the wolves broiled in sauce of deer, the antelope truffled and terrined. We ate the camels with breadcrumbs and butter, and when they were all gone, we sharpened our knives and primed our guns and came back for the elephants. The gunsmith Devisme did the deed, hurled an explosive ball through each of their docile heads. They fell like mountains, like the pillars of Dagon pulled down by mighty Samson, and then we hacked them up and carted them away to the kitchens, to feed the wealthy and the rich in the clubs of bright Paris.
0
Dec 29, 2011
Dec 29, 2011 at 4:51 PM UTC
Castor and Pollux and the Siege of Paris
December, 1870 After the beef was gone, after the pork and the lamb, and the fowl and the fish and the dogs, and the cats, and the rats in the gutter, the butchers turned to the zoo. We ate the wolves. We ate the wolves broiled in sauce of deer, the antelope truffled and terrined. We ate the camels with breadcrumbs and butter, and when they were all gone, we sharpened our knives and primed our guns and came back for the elephants. The gunsmith Devisme did the deed, hurled an explosive ball through each of their docile heads. They fell like mountains, like the pillars of Dagon pulled down by mighty Samson, and then we hacked them up and carted them away to the kitchens, to feed the wealthy and the rich in the clubs of bright Paris.
This poem and others can be found at the author's website, http://gabrielgadfly.com
gabriel-gadfly
Written by
Dec 29, 2011
Dec 29, 2011 at 4:51 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem