every day, he looked out the window, his inhibitions toppling over like dominos; he gawked at the blackbirds, all the same: he could not tell a friend from a foe.
he never thought he’d go so far - as to slay ‘the raven’ with a crooked crowbar; his conscience dripped with sins, and rose - a thorny heap of fallacies, charred.
he blamed the world for all he was; convinced in his soul that he had a good cause: it wasn’t enough to redeem his faux pas, so - he bore the tag of an ill-fated outlaw.
of all the names, by which he was called, who knew - one day - he’d cease to show up? a child dead of his innocence, who never learned how to - as they say -