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Mine, Windbag, Mine

There is an old story that my father

Told me and my brother when we were children.

It is of the windbag

Who now haunts the ancient diamond mines.

It goes like this:

 

"Boys, have I ever told you of the old windbag?

How about the diamond mines that poisoned it?

Well, this windbag was a miner

Who wore his diving suit and large pickaxe with pride.

Indeed his suit was pride,

But the golden diamond mines were lust

Lust that the old miner paid no mind.

For every strike with his large pickaxe

Was every moment his mind left sanity.

He wanted more wanted more wanted more

Always always always dreaming of glittering diamonds

That shrank his soul to stone.

He left this world no longer a miner

But a windbag lingering the mines possessed by diamonds

With its diving suit and large pickaxe.

One dark morning the windbag was mining,

It was mining mining mining,

Yet it could not hear the diamond mines shatter, crumble.

Its coworkers heard, but it only heard diamonds.

The windbag stayed in the old diamond mines,

Trapped in its diving suit

Trapped in its large pickaxe

Trapped in its diamond mines.

It continues to clink and clank

As it lurks amongst the silent diamonds,

Making only physical contact."

 

This story my father told me and my brother,

Haunts me more than the clink and clank

I hear while walking by

The ancient diamond mines

That swallowed the windbag.

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Written by
kenny-h
American
Published
Apr 25, 2012
Lines·Words
36·245
Permission

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