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Replying to a comment on:
Hunter's Moon (Free verse) by Rex Karrs
It had taken him a long time to arrive here.
Not just losing the suit,
And lighting out along the highways.
This was a place that one truly
Had to arrive to
- Whole and complete.
It was a not a place one
Simply went.
Black powder, flints, cotton swabs:
A ritual he knew all too well.
Satisfied, he stood from the chair
And entered into the night air.
The shellac of frost betrayed each footfall;
October moonlight subtle as searchlights
Upon a quest that ended
Nearly before it began.
From the Porch
He tossed
Apples and sugar cubes;
Amazed at how little it took to overcome the hunger
Of the timid.
Flashing white tail and antler
The creature of grace and strength
Danced back into the darkness
How often had such beauty come his way
Taking him so totally unprepared?
So often returning to the shadows?
He would take no prey tonight.
He had collected what he came for:
A scene of reverence and joy
Etched on his heart;
Canada looming over the ridge from this borrowed cabin
That he longed to call "home"
Without shame, he returned the unspent shells
To the kitchen drawer and un-shouldered his burden.
The fired stove sprang to life
As he began the pancakes,
Stared down
At forty years of empty hands
And wept.
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