Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Knight-Errant by Paul Cameron Brown
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Knight-Errant

    By Paul Cameron Brown



        A well-thumbed book
        like a well-thumbed life,
        "whilst you walk this earth"
        yet nothing is "afoot",
        as so many small boys
        throwing stones through the funeral parlour
        glass door.

        A cake-walk? Being alive and interacting
        across the face of the multitude is terrible
        algebra running into unfathomable sums.
        "Doing your sums", my grade school teacher
        used to say and I still am. Whippersnapper,
        learning lessons in a strange stamina
        sort of way.

        One of the multitude died last night &
        is now "resting" in a large, Victorian parlour.
        Even the walls grimace. I went by, caught a peek
        at the assemblage chasing thru rain to see his
        last hurrah. Look, "parlour" can be deadly serious
        even if ice-cream and pizza attach dead-pan humour
        to the term. Imagine, picking the last day of the
        month to go packing. Finale.

        "Going down to the sea in ships". Death as voyage escaping
        prison confines of the harbour. Cliches donate dim glimpses
        into the apparent.
        One sees a lot by the moon.
        Crisp, fall air and
        leaves yellowing
        frightened from their wits
        to end their brief, balloon walk. Such
        faraway faces of Eve and a boat
        moored to a dock.

        Crossing streets -
        a gray, fusillade church,
        knight-errant, breaks the night.
        Trees chuckle in coves through wispy clouds.
        Madonna's face in a shawl only it's not on the
        stained glass window I see her. She seems
        to be pouting. Ashamed of what we have to go through
        at the end of this filth and stupidity? Restrictions?
        Death lifts them in one heave of the casket. More illuminating
        are the mourners. Dashing thru the sleet in brief poignancy;
        shrill, old voices that knew the deceased reciting
        what can only be the obvious. Leaden eyes that cast no shadow.

        Hardly analogous to being "called home" or "going to their
        reward".
        More light is cast by the street lamp, the pale glow of fireflies
        and neon signs winking-drinking waves like the fisherman's
        cork.

        This place is holy to me. A shrine. Night air with mist
        collecting,
        watching flames shuffle over hearth-stones; leaves mount a
        glade.

        The bitterest berry, flower to lily of the valley. A heart that
        makes gravelly noise. Tiny angel spread of petals, no black
        funeral vestments for me.

        Standing close to the clock and thinking.
        A luxury bought with time,
        in every evening weeping in the corner.



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