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Its color sat somewhere on the spectrum between brown and gray (Such things being dependent on vagaries of the light, And the perspective of the beholder) And it served as a testament To the muted benefits of near adequacy, Being too thin for the portentous winds of December, And too warm for the capricious sunshine of May, Its threadbare functionality emblematic of its owner, Whose relationship with those around him (Indeed mankind and his universe in general) Vacillated between an affronted indifference And an implacable if somewhat muted contempt, His commerce with his fellow man, Excepting that required to provide him With the basics of sustenance and shelter, Carried on in an epistolary fashion, Through letters he wrote, Sometimes to those he encountered on a daily basis, More often to mankind and the unheeding cosmos in general, Which were stuffed higgledy-piggledy into his coat pockets. These missives were not humdrum laundry lists Of those slights and injuries, be they petty or mortal, But rather soaring and high-flown in nature and tone, More kin of the sermon than the scolding, Celebrations of life’s splendors great and small, More often than not those he knew little or nothing of first-hand. He’d no intention of sharing these dispatches With the world at large or anyone in particular; He’d simply empty his pockets once they were full enough To present an inconvenience, And he’d laundered any number of them On more than one occasion, And when he’d passed behind this earthly veil, All but unnoticed and unmourned, His landlady had simply emptied the contents of the coat's pockets And consigned them to the trash, Believing the garment barely fit for charitable purposes Washed and given a goodly airing out, Let alone burdened with the detritus of another man’s life.
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Jul 28, 2017
Jul 28, 2017 at 3:02 PM UTC
The Man Who Wrote Letters To His Coat Pockets
Its color sat somewhere on the spectrum between brown and gray (Such things being dependent on vagaries of the light, And the perspective of the beholder) And it served as a testament To the muted benefits of near adequacy, Being too thin for the portentous winds of December, And too warm for the capricious sunshine of May, Its threadbare functionality emblematic of its owner, Whose relationship with those around him (Indeed mankind and his universe in general) Vacillated between an affronted indifference And an implacable if somewhat muted contempt, His commerce with his fellow man, Excepting that required to provide him With the basics of sustenance and shelter, Carried on in an epistolary fashion, Through letters he wrote, Sometimes to those he encountered on a daily basis, More often to mankind and the unheeding cosmos in general, Which were stuffed higgledy-piggledy into his coat pockets. These missives were not humdrum laundry lists Of those slights and injuries, be they petty or mortal, But rather soaring and high-flown in nature and tone, More kin of the sermon than the scolding, Celebrations of life’s splendors great and small, More often than not those he knew little or nothing of first-hand. He’d no intention of sharing these dispatches With the world at large or anyone in particular; He’d simply empty his pockets once they were full enough To present an inconvenience, And he’d laundered any number of them On more than one occasion, And when he’d passed behind this earthly veil, All but unnoticed and unmourned, His landlady had simply emptied the contents of the coat's pockets And consigned them to the trash, Believing the garment barely fit for charitable purposes Washed and given a goodly airing out, Let alone burdened with the detritus of another man’s life.
Something of a draft document, as it strikes me as woefully in need of sanding and varnishing.
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Jul 28, 2017
Jul 28, 2017 at 3:02 PM UTC
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