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#bayou
Awakened by the kiss of dawn the softness of her morning light gently nudges the night away The dew drops twinkle on the lawn a bird sings sweetly his delight, his trilling, courteous and gay The garden flowers seem to spring amidst the green they gently sway floral fragrance floats on the breeze The bayou softly murmuring wavering shadows still at play, lost in the depths of cypress trees A squirrel scampers to the ground and across the yard he rushes buries acorns without a sound In the distance a baying hound eager to hunt in the bushes until fox or raccoon is found A horse gallops over a hill enjoying freedom and the sun, he stops, grazing in grassy fields I follow nature and be still watching as the day has begun and early morning beauty yields ALesiach © 07/29/2019
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Jul 29, 2019
Jul 29, 2019 at 7:49 PM UTC
A Morning Awakens
Wandering through the bayou, wrapped in its eerie embrace. Mysterious and strange, a magical place. Never seeming to change, even as seasons come and go, swampy waters ebb to and fro. Like long-lost daughters, gnarled courtly cypress trees, rise from black murky waters. Draped lovingly in Spanish moss, swaying softly in the breeze. Butterflies seem to float across, as gentle winds ruffle their leaves. Bouquets of wild hibiscus fill the air, mingled with sweet azaleas blooming there. Bullfrogs croak and crickets chirp, the bayou is awash with soothing music. As dragonflies flit the cattails, elusive, water moccasins slithering at your feet or lurk above you in the trees. Just as, the sun begins to sink low, comes the faint sound of a fiddle and bow. The gator comes out of hiding, rising from the dark waters below. Looking for his meal and smiling, with snapping jaws, a deer is caught, then taken below where he will rot. The moon rises high into the night, as fireflies glow in the twilight. A voodoo queen slips into sight, with gnarled hands, she rolls the bones. Whispering cryptic words, she softly moans. Tenderly she caresses her snake, wrapped around and about her neck. A coon-hound whoops it up. The gnarled trees cast spooky shadows. Is that the ghostly apparition of Jean Lafitte? Who managed to escape prison and gallows. Did you bury your treasure in the water or weeds? As the wind moans softly, time to turn home, where you can fill your belly with spicy gumbo. ALesiach © 10/12/2014
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Jul 26, 2019
Jul 26, 2019 at 8:51 PM UTC
Louisiana Bayou
Wandering through the bayou, wrapped in its eerie embrace. Mysterious and strange, a magical place. Never seeming to change, even as seasons come and go, swampy waters ebb to and fro. Like long-lost daughters, gnarled courtly cypress trees, rise from black murky waters. Draped lovingly in Spanish moss, swaying softly in the breeze. Butterflies seem to float across, as gentle winds ruffle their leaves. Bouquets of wild hibiscus fill the air, mingled with sweet azaleas blooming there. Bullfrogs croak and crickets chirp, the bayou is awash with soothing music. As dragonflies flit the cattails, elusive, water moccasins slithering at your feet or lurk above you in the trees. Just as, the sun begins to sink low, comes the faint sound of a fiddle and bow. The gator comes out of hiding, rising from the dark waters below. Looking for his meal and smiling, with snapping jaws, a deer is caught, then taken below where he will rot. The moon rises high into the night, as fireflies glow in the twilight. A voodoo queen slips into sight, with gnarled hands, she rolls the bones. Whispering cryptic words, she softly moans. Tenderly she caresses her snake, wrapped around and about her neck. A coon-hound whoops it up. The gnarled trees cast spooky shadows. Is that the ghostly apparition of Jean Lafitte? Who managed to escape prison and gallows. Did you bury your treasure in the water or weeds? As the wind moans softly, time to turn home, where you can fill your belly with spicy gumbo. ALesiach © 10/12/2014
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Honeysuckle scenting the warm summer night Getting drunk on sweet old apple wine Crickets chirping their melancholy tune Rocking on the porch beneath the wandering moon Soothing sounds of the bayou flowing Warm breeze from the south winds blowing Whispering through the leaves calming Winking fireflies light up the night glowing The tinkling of wind chimes off in the distance Smell the moss from cypress trees, tall and twisted Click-ety clack, click-ety clack Faint sounds of a train coming down the track Haunting strains of a Cajun lullaby fill the air Splash in the bayou birds scatter everywhere Slowly drifting in and out of sleep While the long blue bayou shadows creep ALesiach © 07/01/2017
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Jul 22, 2019
Jul 22, 2019 at 4:58 PM UTC
Bayou Lullaby
They found a dead body in Bayou D’Inde Said he washed up on Thursday afternoon That February water was real real cold When old man drowned I ‘member hearin’ bout that dead body at school Same as when they found a lady’s head in Cameron Parish Reminds me when I found an old ice chest by the pond Full of dead ***** Nobody notices **** anymore The world ain’t watchin’ It’s too busy texting and driving on the bridge To care if anyone jumps
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Mar 25, 2019
Mar 25, 2019 at 12:01 AM UTC
Bayou D’Inde
This land still sings your silent song I chased it West under suspension bridges In the empty whiskey bottles along Mississippi railroad tracks In the sound of sugar sweet air in blue humid mornings and the cool breath of absinthe sipped by the riverside flanked by banana leaves. Heard it in the breeze of swamp-side Cyprus trees, over swaying docks to rod iron French Quarter balconies, above the Bourbon street children drumming hymns of the Bayou's soul.
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Oct 10, 2017
Oct 10, 2017 at 10:39 PM UTC
America
There is a girl called Southern Ugly, She often faces the mirror- Believing that the reflection must be oneself. But a woman’s essence Lives in the light, not in our eyes. Mother Mary, dressed in blue- Your daughter sees her face, knowing That she is not first to be saved for Heaven. We come second to God (Though Man did not refuse the apple). Mother said, “You are a southern belle, Just baptized in the bayou. ****** in the water, The depths of the swamp do not foster Power nor Fortune But your birth, the prayer of the Moon. And like a cypress knee That has not yet broken the surface, You’re hidden in wisdom unknown."
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Aug 14, 2017
Aug 14, 2017 at 3:52 AM UTC
The Moon's Daughter
Nature, too, is self-consuming. Even the grandest oak of all southern Louisiana will be uprooted in a hurricane. The moss that grazes the water with gentle finger tips from those weary branches will be swallowed by the water. An old man's life spent in Houma is reflected in the river currents; his house built on stilts across from the cemetery where is wife is buried next to her eldest son. It meets the Mississippi not surrendering, returning
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Jul 12, 2017
Jul 12, 2017 at 9:02 PM UTC
From Which You Came
Tiny ankles hang down from a wooden bridge over the bayou- and my friend and I stare at the black water and point at all the furniture legs jetting out of the blackness as if they were Cyprus knees— and he says to me  “Someone said there’s at least a hundred bodies in there” and without hesitation or a moment of silence for the uncertain yet forgotten Dead I say, “Bodies float, so we would see them if that were true” and he replied,  after a brief moment of thought, “Maybe they’re tied to all the couches or stuffed in the refrigerators”   and I couldn’t believe how many house hold appliances have been repurposed to host all these passed souls in the bowels of the swamp and with a swing of my leg, too swift— my left shoe dropped  and hovered on the water where lily pads should have been
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Jul 12, 2017
Jul 12, 2017 at 9:00 PM UTC
Trespassing