(x = space)
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There’s a Story at the End
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I don’t know what to say.
I need the birds to
dance across the
page
with their feet dipped in ink.
It’s a medieval riddle’s
answer,
though it would be cruel
to force birds’ feet
into wells.
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I guess we take their feathers,
turn them into quills;
maybe we could wait
to find quills
inside forests:
gifts from the sources of stories
and the desert
and the sky
and moving waters
taking the shape
of earth below.
That’s what I want to tell,
a story!
Something for everyone. And
is there such a thing?
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Once there was a child
in a forest
Who came upon a grown-up
clearly starving.
The child gave the grown-up
the only piece of
bread
in the child’s bag.
The adult rose up and thanked
the child.
Then they noticed that
the child’s bag
had a hole through which
crumbs had fallen—and through
forest-magic
had not been eaten
by birds or other creatures!
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They knew certainly where the
crumbs
would take them,
so they went home
where everyone was
known,
because everyone was
home.
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C L Couch
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Photo by Jan Kopřiva on Unsplash
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April 28, 2021 at 6:26 pm
I like this one a lot. I used to think I wanted to write things anyone could appreciate. A story for everyone. Hemingway said something like that. He wanted to write in a style that anyone could relate to and understand. Many literary writers visualize their audience as some elite niche. I never wanted to do that, but of course, I failed at it miserably. Hem probably succeeded a bit better, though he likely missed the mark, too. But at least he started his writing day right: just write one true thing and go from there. One true thing about the human condition. Of course, he found what was “true at first light was a lie by noon.” At least in Africa. Truth and even our own stories elude us, don’t they? I am about to start my revision of my fantasy novel and I’m glad it got postponed in a way. I want to improve it. Instead of having the hubris to think I could write one true thing, I’m going to instead try to frame one worthwhile question every day I revise. Maybe if I do that well enough, I’ll stumble on a truth or two. You do that in your work.