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It was the night of the thundersnow, Meteorological harpie normally reserved for our northern brethren. She stood grimly at the window, In wait for a dawn which would not come Save for the odd light, the incongruous rumbling, Mock forbearer of those easy languid evenings of August. She'd made some noise approximating a sigh, Then returned to undress, I hurriedly unlacing my boots, removing my pants, (My feigned nonchalance a foolish, pitiable thing) And I remember her ******* as  oddly demure, Her ******* bewitching gumdrops, The triangle below her waist downy, almost kittenish. I'd broken her maiden clumsily, eagerly, all unheeding haste. We'd lain next to each other for a short while afterwards (The schools already closed for the next day, Her father recently gone to the boneyard on Ludlow Hill, She soon to be shuttled off to some spinster aunt in Dillsboro.) I'd nattered on about summer vacations and thens and laters; She'd said little, simply studying me with the bemused half-smile One saves for sad dreamers not intimate with the knowledge That notions of tomorrow and forever are strictly for suckers, And as I strolled home come mid-morning, The sun implacably straddled the sky, Leaving the sidewalks and shoulders of the road Completely dry, as if the night before had been a thing Of perhaps-only, of dreams and tales for a later time.
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Mar 7, 2018
Mar 7, 2018 at 8:54 AM UTC
A Variation Upon r's "Batting eyelids at a blood moon"
It was the night of the thundersnow, Meteorological harpie normally reserved for our northern brethren. She stood grimly at the window, In wait for a dawn which would not come Save for the odd light, the incongruous rumbling, Mock forbearer of those easy languid evenings of August. She'd made some noise approximating a sigh, Then returned to undress, I hurriedly unlacing my boots, removing my pants, (My feigned nonchalance a foolish, pitiable thing) And I remember her ******* as  oddly demure, Her ******* bewitching gumdrops, The triangle below her waist downy, almost kittenish. I'd broken her maiden clumsily, eagerly, all unheeding haste. We'd lain next to each other for a short while afterwards (The schools already closed for the next day, Her father recently gone to the boneyard on Ludlow Hill, She soon to be shuttled off to some spinster aunt in Dillsboro.) I'd nattered on about summer vacations and thens and laters; She'd said little, simply studying me with the bemused half-smile One saves for sad dreamers not intimate with the knowledge That notions of tomorrow and forever are strictly for suckers, And as I strolled home come mid-morning, The sun implacably straddled the sky, Leaving the sidewalks and shoulders of the road Completely dry, as if the night before had been a thing Of perhaps-only, of dreams and tales for a later time.
Do you need to read r's original to read this piece? Not necessarily, but it would certainly help. Do you need to read r's original? Without question.
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Mar 7, 2018
Mar 7, 2018 at 8:54 AM UTC
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