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#carlysimonandbunnyberigan
In my father’s cosmology, God rose late come Sunday morning, Having wreaked His vengeance by proxy the night before, And it was a given that we greeted the Sabbath With whispers and sock-soft tiptoe, Knowing that his belt (black, wide, thick with implicit warnings) Hung within easy reach of the bed, Though sometimes, with no more explanation than Man alive, what a beautiful world it is today! Cold cornflake brunches would be postponed (Our wonder mixed with consternation and rumbling stomachs) As we would be whisked into the car In order to sing His praises, our father all but jumping from the car, Heading toward the preacher at a trot, Invariably greeting him with *Devil’s on holiday, Father, So here I am* (the church was Lutheran, Though it could have been a mosque for all he cared.) He’d sit through the sermon, rapt and at attention, Alternately scowling and smiling, knitting his brow and nodding, And then he would corner the incumbent occupant of the pulpit (He’d have scarcely noticed, if at all, that the leadership of the flock Often changed hands between our cicada-esque appearances) Backing him into a wall or against a railing While he jabbered away, pointing or grabbing a sleeve in punctuation, Gesturing like some latter-day Prospero, arms ****** Heavenward To embrace the air, the sky, the whole of the cosmos, amen, While the pastor’s gaze varied from bemusement to outright horror. Such occasions were outliers, of course, Father being much more inclined To spend his Saturday evenings in un-Christian pursuits Then stagger home singing a litany of done-me-wrong songs, And his search for a joyful hundred-proof clarity Ended before he glimpsed fifty, that being time enough (So the pathologist noted in his final judgment) For his liver to become elephantine, his kidneys mere pebbles (Those effects, be they deleterious or otherwise, Not listed explicitly nor in the footnotes Which accompanied the post mortem.)
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Dec 7, 2016
Dec 7, 2016 at 10:23 AM UTC
go chase the wild and nighttime streets, sang daddy
In my father’s cosmology, God rose late come Sunday morning, Having wreaked His vengeance by proxy the night before, And it was a given that we greeted the Sabbath With whispers and sock-soft tiptoe, Knowing that his belt (black, wide, thick with implicit warnings) Hung within easy reach of the bed, Though sometimes, with no more explanation than Man alive, what a beautiful world it is today! Cold cornflake brunches would be postponed (Our wonder mixed with consternation and rumbling stomachs) As we would be whisked into the car In order to sing His praises, our father all but jumping from the car, Heading toward the preacher at a trot, Invariably greeting him with *Devil’s on holiday, Father, So here I am* (the church was Lutheran, Though it could have been a mosque for all he cared.) He’d sit through the sermon, rapt and at attention, Alternately scowling and smiling, knitting his brow and nodding, And then he would corner the incumbent occupant of the pulpit (He’d have scarcely noticed, if at all, that the leadership of the flock Often changed hands between our cicada-esque appearances) Backing him into a wall or against a railing While he jabbered away, pointing or grabbing a sleeve in punctuation, Gesturing like some latter-day Prospero, arms ****** Heavenward To embrace the air, the sky, the whole of the cosmos, amen, While the pastor’s gaze varied from bemusement to outright horror. Such occasions were outliers, of course, Father being much more inclined To spend his Saturday evenings in un-Christian pursuits Then stagger home singing a litany of done-me-wrong songs, And his search for a joyful hundred-proof clarity Ended before he glimpsed fifty, that being time enough (So the pathologist noted in his final judgment) For his liver to become elephantine, his kidneys mere pebbles (Those effects, be they deleterious or otherwise, Not listed explicitly nor in the footnotes Which accompanied the post mortem.)
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