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Family Tree They come from far and wide once a year to mingle and snack on catered shrimp and small talk in the long line that snakes around the room to the open bar besieged five deep, the beating heart of the party until the string band starts up and everyone hits the dance floor, limbs loose, knees high, hair down, skirts hiked generations of farmers and drifters, rail men and conscripts, schemers and failures, a cacophony of native brogue and broken English, long lazy vowels stretched to breaking. The men have my nose, the women your eyes, but neither you nor I claim the crazy cackle coming from a skinny gal with electric hair or the flat, vacant gaze of a fellow in coveralls, hands like hay rakes, yellow fingers balled into fists. The bar closes at twelve, they start to drift away, arms draped, propping each other up, telling the same old tearful tales, falls down wells, battle axes to the head, starvation in alarming numbers and many iterations of pox and croup, ague and catarrh, bilious fever, dropsy and the flux, melancholia, milk leg and screws, a miserable game of one-upmanship savored by all as they disappear into the night, fore-bearers eyeing us at the door, polite yet taciturn, playing things close to the vest mum on the matter of the higher branches of our family tree.
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Oct 10, 2016
Oct 10, 2016 at 7:40 AM UTC
Family Tree
Family Tree They come from far and wide once a year to mingle and snack on catered shrimp and small talk in the long line that snakes around the room to the open bar besieged five deep, the beating heart of the party until the string band starts up and everyone hits the dance floor, limbs loose, knees high, hair down, skirts hiked generations of farmers and drifters, rail men and conscripts, schemers and failures, a cacophony of native brogue and broken English, long lazy vowels stretched to breaking. The men have my nose, the women your eyes, but neither you nor I claim the crazy cackle coming from a skinny gal with electric hair or the flat, vacant gaze of a fellow in coveralls, hands like hay rakes, yellow fingers balled into fists. The bar closes at twelve, they start to drift away, arms draped, propping each other up, telling the same old tearful tales, falls down wells, battle axes to the head, starvation in alarming numbers and many iterations of pox and croup, ague and catarrh, bilious fever, dropsy and the flux, melancholia, milk leg and screws, a miserable game of one-upmanship savored by all as they disappear into the night, fore-bearers eyeing us at the door, polite yet taciturn, playing things close to the vest mum on the matter of the higher branches of our family tree.
dave-hardin
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Oct 10, 2016
Oct 10, 2016 at 7:40 AM UTC
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