Saturday, October 14, 2006

A Legend of Juice and Gore

# 3 IMPORTANT questions and a note:
• How do the bastards fly without a plane?
• How do the young learn to speak?
• How do the old forget how to speak?

PORTHOS was the dog of celebrated playwright James Matthew Barrie, Who, according to him, dreamt of being a bear one day. If you read Peter Pan, his most famous work, you’ll realize that dogs in that particular play, behave particularly oddly.

The Legend of Juice and Gore: A Half Moon Investigation on duality.
How can we be so different

And yet be so much alike?
Is it an unusual display of Pedantry
Or a Fool’s shame that sets us apart?

Just a silver of Blue Grass

And the closeness of the Noon Star
PORTHOS dreams of being a bear one day
And here I thwart his unreal dream.

May we ruin the wool?
And hoist silken flags
Linen draped vassals
In a ghetto of stark naked bodies.

What makes the protagonist shiver?
Nah; not fear, I know it.
What turns him into a ferocious beast?
Naught of anger, nor pain of flesh.

Madness is a tad unnecessary;
We are immortal in this mad cycle.
What remains to be judged however,
Is a chaos of the fleeting past.

Shouts of steel dreams
Guns of dog fights
Gore for the living
And Juice for the living dead.

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