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He'd lived in the remaining house on the little byway, The place and its existence somewhat accidental As it was built as the groundskeeper's cottage Accompanying a rambling edifice Built by a former president of the mill, That once-grand structure gone to rack and ruin Nothing remaining save the odd bit of foundation Poking forlornly above crownvetch and milkweed, Though the lot of the man we'd dubbed the ogre (The notion that he had an actual name Not occurring to us at the time, Though, as Nicky Demmer wisely noted Whatever it might be, it must be unspoken.) Was only slightly less unkempt and foreboding, And it is hard to remember what exactly made him Something to be feared and avoided at all costs, Perhaps the combination of height (Though lessened yet somehow accentuated By a slight yet perceptible stoop) And a widow's peak at the top of an unusually high forehead Bookended by wiry and unruly locks, Perhaps the fact that he rarely appeared in the daylight, And then squinting as he turned his head to the sky In the manner of one who fully expected That it would fall, Chicken-Little style But in any case his lawn Was strictly no-man's land, And any wiffle ball or frisbee, Regardless of how new it may be Or the retribution attached to coming home without it, Remained behind, mourned but forsaken And at some point we moved beyond our unease, Too old for such superstition, Moving on to other totems, other portents Though some years later I happened upon his obituary, Laying out the signposts of an ordinary Though vaguely underwhelming and melancholy life: He'd worked on the third shift at the mill all his days, Thus precluding much of the social commerce With his fellow man, no Rotary or Odd Fellows rites To be performed at his service (Of which there was none, burial being private as well) And the list of survivors was limited to one daughter Wholly unknown to us, ostensibly taken elsewhere By an unmentioned and unmourning mother. The item, brief and unadorned as it was, Brought me back to that fretful nine-year-old self, Though imbued with a greater disquiet, As I had a deeper knowledge of the finality Of cold, agate type, among several other things.
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Mar 1, 2021
Mar 1, 2021 at 10:45 AM UTC
The Ogre Of Peach Alley
He'd lived in the remaining house on the little byway, The place and its existence somewhat accidental As it was built as the groundskeeper's cottage Accompanying a rambling edifice Built by a former president of the mill, That once-grand structure gone to rack and ruin Nothing remaining save the odd bit of foundation Poking forlornly above crownvetch and milkweed, Though the lot of the man we'd dubbed the ogre (The notion that he had an actual name Not occurring to us at the time, Though, as Nicky Demmer wisely noted Whatever it might be, it must be unspoken.) Was only slightly less unkempt and foreboding, And it is hard to remember what exactly made him Something to be feared and avoided at all costs, Perhaps the combination of height (Though lessened yet somehow accentuated By a slight yet perceptible stoop) And a widow's peak at the top of an unusually high forehead Bookended by wiry and unruly locks, Perhaps the fact that he rarely appeared in the daylight, And then squinting as he turned his head to the sky In the manner of one who fully expected That it would fall, Chicken-Little style But in any case his lawn Was strictly no-man's land, And any wiffle ball or frisbee, Regardless of how new it may be Or the retribution attached to coming home without it, Remained behind, mourned but forsaken And at some point we moved beyond our unease, Too old for such superstition, Moving on to other totems, other portents Though some years later I happened upon his obituary, Laying out the signposts of an ordinary Though vaguely underwhelming and melancholy life: He'd worked on the third shift at the mill all his days, Thus precluding much of the social commerce With his fellow man, no Rotary or Odd Fellows rites To be performed at his service (Of which there was none, burial being private as well) And the list of survivors was limited to one daughter Wholly unknown to us, ostensibly taken elsewhere By an unmentioned and unmourning mother. The item, brief and unadorned as it was, Brought me back to that fretful nine-year-old self, Though imbued with a greater disquiet, As I had a deeper knowledge of the finality Of cold, agate type, among several other things.
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Mar 1, 2021
Mar 1, 2021 at 10:45 AM UTC
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