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4. A Stalkers Serenade (French Cinquain)

  4. A Stalker's Serenade

  (French Cinquain)

  1

  Outside the Meadows full of life,

  Beyond the fringe of Persian Zan *

  Where passions end in pain and strife,

  There lies a ghostly like where none

  Who go there have returned by dawn.

  It is a nameless lake; it's river

  Cannot be seen by living eyes,

  Nor can the prayers of faith deliver

  The dead out of its banks where sighs

  Of living resignation dies.

  Upon these shores my Therza wakes

  After a slumber, deep and long;

  Her body's stiff, her head still aches,

  The remnants of her dreams still strong:

  Her slumbers tell her nothing's wrong.

  She looks about and wonders wherefore

  She 'wakens here outside her palace

  Bedroom where she nightly sleeps; therefore,

  She picks herself up off the callous

  Gemstones that form a shore of balas. **

  Ah, how the jewel-encrusted shore

  Sparkles beneath a moon of moons,

  Brighter than she ever saw before!

  She loses breath and nearly swoons

  Over the beauties of such boons.

  But there's a cold sterility

  Hiding within these gleaming shores,

  For in this charming moon-kissed sea

  Lies hidden creatures whose great roars

  Are whispered of in countless folklores.

  But heedless of these rumored threats

  That sleep beneath the glassy sheen,

  She says, "Where are my lovely sunsets?

  Where are the founts to cool my spleen?

  Where am I now? What does this mean?"

  And so she wondered for a while

  Over the mystery before her,

  And all the while, she eyes the isle

  That neither beckons, nor ignores her,

  Until its aspect 'gins to bore her.

  She flicks her eyes around the scene,

  Observing all she could perceive;

  Beyond the isle, the emerald green

  Of endless leagues of grass would leave

  Her silent, ere she 'gins to grieve.

  Throughout this endless emerald field,

  Stretching beyond the edge of sight

  Where night's dark curtain will not yield

  To the moon's radiant beams of light;

  Such is the strangeness of tonight!

  Fighting the tears, she soldiers out

  Beyond the gem-encrusted shore,

  Keeping her fragile wits about

  Her, trying to find the exit door

  And fearing to find out what's in store.

  Onward she walks the pathless field

  Where never walks a living soul,

  Trying to find the door concealed;

  Minutes elapse to hours, and whole

  Miles pass by without reaching her goal.

  After she treks for many hours,

  She then looks back; there lies the lake

  So far away the night devours

  It in a mist-filed robe of black;

  She says, "How long will this search take?"

  This tale has been unlawfully lifted from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.

  She turns her eyes across the wide

  Emerald sea of glistening grass,

  But as she does, she's back inside

  The confines of the lake. "Alas!"

  She says. "Wherefore can't I go pass?"

  And so she sinks upon the balas

  Shore, there to weep her miseries,

  Because some devilry or malice

  Ordains to keep her; if she flees

  Again, God knows what else would tease

  Her with the cruelty of this game!

  And so she weeps and weeps and weeps,

  Weeping with bitter ruth and blame,

  Quaking her heart with sudden leaps

  Of hope and rage wherein there creeps

  The sharpest stabs of melancholy!

  Now all is lost; her soul's in tatters;

  She knows not what is vile or holy;

  Her nervous courage cracks, then shatters;

  Hope of escape no longer matters.

  No longer matters if she lives

  Or dies upon this cursèd spot,

  On which she finds herself! Who gives

  A damn how far she's ever got,

  Where here upon these gems is her lot?

  And so, she stews in miseries,

  Thinking of how to end her life,

  Thinking on horrid revelries,

  Wishing she had with her a knife

  To end the struggles of her strife.

  But even misters can fade;

  She wipes her eyes and spies the balas

  Stones that now glint as if they're made

  To lure her eyes; she thinks of Alice ***

  From Carroll's books inside her palace.

  And struck with wonder at the gems,

  She picks one up and then espies it,

  Saying, "If you were me and gems

  Were maidens, how would you despise it

  If I'm to wear you?" Here she tries it

  About her dainty fingers small,

  Pretending it is fastened on

  A wedding ring whilst at a ball;

  But in pretending, there beams one

  Shining the shine of mischief fun.

  She spies the glint, and up she goes

  To pick it up and try it on;

  But when she picks it up, there glows

  Another brighter piece of fun;

  She goes on picking, one by one . . .

  Until with fistfuls in her pockets,

  Until she's overweighed with stones,

  She halts amidst her growing stock; it's

  Only now she notices the bones,

  The shifting gems, the hideous moans.

  She drops the gems and screams in fright,

  Ready to turn and sprint away!

  "Stay!" she hears a voice ring through the night;

  She turns around. What could she say

  To spite the sight that bids her stay?

  For there doth stand a handsome prince,

  Prince of the realm she's stranded in;

  It's just enough to make her wince

  In shame upon her green-eyed sin

  To steal the gems she cannot win.

  His eyes, they blaze in foul contempt;

  His handsome face bestirs the soul;

  She cannot move or feign attempt

  To free herself from his control—

  So strong's his gaze, so stern and whole.

  For in those eyes stir all the fires

  Of Hell t' entrance her heart of hearts,

  Her fount of lust and cruel desires;

  So caught up in such stinging smarts,

  She backs away in fright and starts

  To lose her senses in her screams,

  Only to faint into a swoon

  That sends her to her land of dreams,

  Where she will die on this full moon

  Inside her palace very soon.

  2

  And so I wait and dread the hour

  That will ere long spell out her doom:

  My darling Therza, sweetest flower,

  I'd rather stay here in your room

  And make this place our sacred tomb!

  And so upon the hour of death,

  I shut the doors and linger here;

  And at my Therza's final breath,

  I know my death draws ever near:

  I'll meet you soon, dear—never fear!

  I spy the dagger, pick it up,

  And place the point upon my breast;

  Thrusting it home, I quaff the cup

  Of suicide, the final test,

  Then drift into eternal rest.

  And so I follow you in death—

  Heaven or Hell, it matters not;

  No fear of death or loss of breath

  Will separate our destined lot

  In bliss, where else is dust and rot.

  FINISH

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