Pages

Thursday, October 22, 2020

-- a Poem for Weekly Scribblings # 42


Gone 

Thirty years have passed 
But I remember still 
Seemed like yesterday 
Same crowd except for Luke 

Outskirts of our town 
Cemetery visit 
Halloween ghosts 
Goblins too real scary 

Down in the corner 
A few carnations waved 
When we neared we stopped 
Twilight nearing the night 

Something was not right 
A grave freshly covered 
Amateur work showed 
Human leg sticking out 

Slowly coming close 
Other leg chewed away 
Bone splinters around 
Filled our treat bags with bone 

Something rustling near 
Let out blood curdling howl 
Teeth barred deadly growl 
We grabbed our bags and ran 

Keeper of the bones 
Job they elected me 
Stashed under my bed 
Guarded by boogey man 

Years pased I'm renowned 
Bone artist carved and cast 
Grinding those splinters 
Was in back of my mind 

Art piece remembrance 
Bone paste into the mold 
Hardened then polished 
A rosary fit for Queen  

Put it on display 
Think now where would it be 
Go back to that grave 
Hang it on the tombstone 

Gathering our crowd 
Except for Luke we go 
Halloween is here
Twilight we are not seen 

The broach in the bag 
Tombstone is now in sight 
Would  wolves come again 
Something is different 

Sleek stone name we know 
It's Luke surprise surprise 
Gone ragged fellow 
Hang the rosary here 
 _ _ _ 

 - Poem Copyright, Jimmiehov 2020, All Rights Reserved 
 - Linked to Weekly Scribblings # 42, prompt by Magaly Guerrero and introductory by MMT -- read her instructions and of MMT's workings at 
 .

9 comments:

  1. Mysterious. There really IS a "Bone Church" in the Czech Republic - google it, it is pretty interesting - over 40,000 skeletons were used.

    ReplyDelete
  2. That was a spooky one! Gruesome too, thinking of him grinding the bones and molding the bone paste.

    ReplyDelete
  3. What a story! Feeling bad for poor old Luke! BOO.

    ReplyDelete
  4. It is good to be taken somewhere where you feel uncomfortable and how well you did this Jim for your readers with this poem.

    ReplyDelete
  5. You made this into an enthralling story. (I think your protagonist and mine might be first cousins!)

    ReplyDelete