pawed pawns in gowns

  Ignoring the feints of fawns who squealed in rounds

  His brown bombs mark narcs

  He flouts bounds and cons skates who kneel on logs in parks

  The dogs croaked like frogs and bonded long hate

  Absconded late with condomed bait and a halibut angler

  Bone-free and washed, a bitterly blonde mangler

  Talbot only watched as he hides in a calf manger

  Waiting for great wrath and giraffe rangers with whom to wrangle danger

  Despite his taste for wagers, he strains drafts with half strangers

  His ravenous face of cake is fatedly that of a carafe-changer

  He ladles lays in leas, labels light lasers with leis

  And lays lye, lungs lame, lightly lashed and lapping

  On a lain lady, lamb-like and lied-to, latches lagging

  Lately laid in loos, his languor and laugh lacking

  Losing low lines, like a strangler half-mast macking

  He wastefully mattered, poorly spackle jacking

  Gracefully blind, lathered in endeavorous lace

  He's lazily lying in forever wait

  The next brother was Mary

  Nary a saint and more a fairy

  Barely a lady, more unfairly hairy

  And less scarily merry

  Carefree with a bare knee

  Begging for fares free

  Her lair, twee

  Her bear steed bared needs

  Like dared deeds and paired reeds

  Garishly tweed, she barely gained speed

  Like barley feigned weed

  Her sins stained the steam-cleaned kings

  Who sing of suns and slain scum

  Her lips drain cum from lame men

  Lightly hung and limply lunged

  She simply shunned fun

  And never deigned to hug one

  Now she's gunned, not stunned

  But outrunned and out-tongued

  She's muck-dunned like a duck poorly slummed

  She's surely chummed

  And no doubt very well-done

  Annie Runnel was a lady, a slate-slain baby

  With a tan knee and pummeled glee

  She laid lame labias on land

  Slammed fees and tunneled to flee

  She made tame Arabians her brand

  Rumbled free and humbled three flame-raided peons

  Her blame-fated neon lackeys are dames

  She slapped he who peed on her rack

  And muzzled her bleed

  Her steed did guzzle mead

  And lay his seed upon her beaded sheen

  She needed to weep but dumbly heeded a creep

  Her actions deeded her feet to the bay, well-greeted

  Where the elite fleet of brethren became meat that ran red

  She underlasted the heat and damn lead

  Like sleet in a toasted tanning bed, fellatedly derided by sooted negs

  Annie Runnel belatedly decided she sure should have fled

  The worst was Chester

  The first whose wounds openly festered

  His mirth, sequestered

  From his perch where he best heard

  How to test curds and rest words

  Lest herds of thirds thunder through

  Under birds who sunder stews

  Like abundant Jews judging from truncheon-views

  Watching luncheons with a monotone hue

  His brawn flowed from a lawn mowed true

  And morbidly slew torpor-free dudes

  With fact-free attitudes and hackneyed platitudes

  The slackard mule scatters few gathered troops, blathering of hoops

  The dogs battered his rules and flowers like leaning towers

  He's underflattered like drool

  And powerful teaming tattered schools

  His bladder fools as he drops his ladder and tools

  He's dead too, unfueled, badder than cool

  The next to go down was Kent

  Whose at rest low pounds got him bent

  He prepared to roll sound and vent

  Blow town with tents

  He sold hounds for rent

  His cold surrounded and pounded out goo

  His bold both astounded and blew

  It abounded about then and among his own crew

  He scouted out hens and songs for his tunes

  He allowed a bout of has-beens too strong for his goons

  To hustle with men who long to say sooth

  Kent was cowed by a couch for map tins and tongs

  Smooth boons and smart bongs with vermouth

  Outmuscled by friends who long for less ruth

  He goofed and spoofed, fell down and poofed

  Left town to roof and root for nudes in booths

  Good Brother Kent is kinda aloof

  Brother Calvert awoke one day, rowdily flow-shamed

  To loudly proclaim the pain of his mouth hurt

  Laying at the north end of his south yurt in a bed of romaine

  Surrounded by cows who blurt that they quit cud

  But have since found a rebound to the foul squirt of untumbled mud

  Whence quince abounded and fud sounded like hip mugs

  His dumb ever-mounted, his traits unrounded

  Like downtown bait repounded for unallowed hops re-counted

  He founded hate and flouted big brown ops

  Unwound into the ground like a carousing cyclops

  Arousing right hooks and endowing dicks into tight nooks

  Writing dreams in white books

  He's browsing for tried looks and hooded rooks vitally reamed

  Like wooden-hooked fighting teams with gleaming seams

  Seeming lean, the dogs' true fiend hits him hard

  Unshines his sheen and nips his lard

  He falls far and burns hot like a star

  Now a well-marred worm-pot, his flirt dropped like tar

  He lights bars, trikes and cars with words he'd guard

  His jersey's in shards, his might is garred

  His triteness scarred, his whiteness is finally charred

  Unlike his life, with which he losily sparred

  The lone last dog was Brother Harford

  Starved and tartared by a blown glass knob

  He bartered for life like a diplomatic job

  A cryptographic mob ungartered his wife

  He's martyred in strife and fell starboard with fright

  His hard-earned car overturning over cardboard alight

  Unchartered, unheard, a turd with hearts ungarnered

  His thoughts torn between born-again porn

  And storing whores for shorn pagan bones

  He'd rather fake more tours to slake his sour thirst

  Immersed in wine, fine times, second tries and first-time buyers

  For lies, bursting with rhymes from gelatin farmers

  Aimed at melanin harmers on lowered tires

  "He cuts up fine," says the skeleton carver

  Hired and fired like larva

  This confirms the fate of dear, dear Brother Harford

  Having dumped their brothers and sisters in glistening bogs

  The missile-king dogs hover over blisters like the mothers of fisters

  Lovers of biscuits like all the other idiots

  They live hideous, repeating piteous lies

  They're stuck in their stint, the prettiest guys

  They want hints and to shit in disguise

  To never spit their wittiest lies under pitiful skies

  Never bid against any man they'd hit again

  Despite his frivolous cries over flint and tin

  That super-slim Dominican with curt eyes

  A gritty grin and syphilitic surprise

  He thinned again, burnt flies and skinned kin

  As his flood rised, he threw rims in bins

  His bud wised, tipping tin men in trim skin with fins and hens

  Their lens see
s sin and supplies, sips gin and trips like ten drips

  They nibble on nebulous nips and credulous lips

  Measuring hips with knotted whips, treasury tips and blotted chips

  Their wit rips bits of flipped dicks as they rut in muddy guts

  Shaking butts for guff in huts of sluts, imminently blunt

  Eminently foretold, they died with more mold than lore or gold

  More core sores than bold old souls, more holes torn in the clothes cold coal doled

  Their scolded scores stole corn, which bodes well for toads born in roads

  Waylaid, the dogs folded on hold, way late, told to mourn forlorn to satiate simple scorn

  Every day's weight was a thorn, unworn, too gray and unborn

  If you enjoyed these poems, you might also enjoy this novel by the same author:

  Occupy This Novel!

  When characters who rarely have a role in novels decide that they are fed up with the status quo and begin to Occupy the works of authors, they have the simple goal of starting a conversation. The protesting characters are united in their demand for a fairer system of fiction, but divisions arise over how best to achieve equality. The Occupiers soon find that the authors of the world aren't taking their movement in stride, and have an enforcer who will stop at nothing to make sure literature itself isn't overthrown. The rebelling characters battle through novels and poems, gather allies from ancient archetypes and even stage an attack on a major motion picture. What started as a simple message from the less-successful characters to the authors who fail to cast them turns into an epic adventure about characters gaining independence and fashioning narratives of their own.

  Available in the Kindle Store now!

 
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