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Fissures cut through thick mocha fur, saturating The forest floor with stark crimson. The deer flails, Broken, knees buckled, breath shallow and emerging As vanishing steam in frosty November air. He falls on a bed of sugar maple leaves, illuminated In dappled sunlight and fulvous hues. “Must’ve been the coyotes,” my brother whispers, As my pocketknife meets the stag’s throat. Gentle Auburn clouds and freezes time, the body falls still. My father says, “Sacrifice is a form of worship, but it is only through Mercy that we may show passion for what we believe.” Coyote bites prevent carvings from going to Buxton’s General Store, But what nature produces it also receives. Ants forage along the split underbelly, And a red-tailed hawk carries away the entrails. History defines the antlers of deer as symbols of the Gods, And men would wear them atop their heads. I collect only them, still draped with threads of velvet, Knowing that years from now, nestled inside the perimeter Of wind-beaten fences around the family farm, beyond Moss-covered slopes and the Wishing Rock, Will be the bones of a solitary stag.
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Sep 22, 2014
Sep 22, 2014 at 1:50 PM UTC
Mercy
Fissures cut through thick mocha fur, saturating The forest floor with stark crimson. The deer flails, Broken, knees buckled, breath shallow and emerging As vanishing steam in frosty November air. He falls on a bed of sugar maple leaves, illuminated In dappled sunlight and fulvous hues. “Must’ve been the coyotes,” my brother whispers, As my pocketknife meets the stag’s throat. Gentle Auburn clouds and freezes time, the body falls still. My father says, “Sacrifice is a form of worship, but it is only through Mercy that we may show passion for what we believe.” Coyote bites prevent carvings from going to Buxton’s General Store, But what nature produces it also receives. Ants forage along the split underbelly, And a red-tailed hawk carries away the entrails. History defines the antlers of deer as symbols of the Gods, And men would wear them atop their heads. I collect only them, still draped with threads of velvet, Knowing that years from now, nestled inside the perimeter Of wind-beaten fences around the family farm, beyond Moss-covered slopes and the Wishing Rock, Will be the bones of a solitary stag.
All of my poetry contains a hint of my obsession with the beauty of the natural world. For one of the assignments in my workshop, we were given subjects by our classmates. After some contemplation, they decided to give me the task of tackling something ugly in nature, and this was my response. Enjoy!
emily-schumann
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Sep 22, 2014
Sep 22, 2014 at 1:50 PM UTC
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