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#badgers
"And what rough beast, its hour come round at last, slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?" - W. B. Yeats: The Second Coming Dachshund Bred to burrow after badgers, what's he doing here? Terrorizing the underwear behind my couch. Is he a true hund, or just a pan-fried sausage with a Bluto chest? I wonder what they called him back then, in the Black Forest, when dogs were dogs. Tracker? Hunter? Try: Baron Von Putt-Putt Tootsie Roll. I'm Scot myself. My people once sacked York. No, this isn't York. It's Plano, Texas. Don't think a Dachshund and a Scot can't sack Dallas from here. Until then, we play our little game: What rough ****** slouches toward my underwear?
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Mar 1, 2018
Mar 1, 2018 at 1:23 PM UTC
Dachshund
Somewhere between the dream of what it could be and what it wanted to be, this poem hightailed it out of town. Down the road it went, careening into hedgerows, jostling small birds from their resting time. Running for all it's worth, out to the sea cliffs then arrested, stock still, before all that immensity. Chagrined by such a rash attempt at escape, even blushing a bit, it wondered about strange things: What would it be like to be a badger? To always be dressed in all those lovely stripes? To never have bad wardrobe days? Or what about an otter, with such strong muscles, and an utter delight for swimming? To never really feel the cold? These are the things a poem can wonder about, when it isn't quite sure, just right then, in the present moment, how to be a poem.
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Sep 7, 2015
Sep 7, 2015 at 7:26 PM UTC
The Poem That Got Away