Showing posts with label earie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label earie. Show all posts

Sunday, October 29, 2017

River Town



He combed his hands through his gray hair and put his faded black ball cap back on.

His scrap memo pad in hand he came into the cafe with enough for a coffee.

Took a table in earshot of several talkative tables sure to supply good material.

In a colorful world of debate and opinions, he was gray scale and unnoticed.


The characters fill the place each sporting a short story of their own

An angel playing the devil’s fiddle, the local poet on the griddle.

The hipster clearing last night’s haze, a handicapped old fart on a bass.

The clutter of words filled the air offering hope for grace of the pen.


An hour with the same cup, his paper an unloaded gun, he shifted.

Not a word of hello, brought none of goodbye as he pushed the glass door.

The river town was in it’s Sunday’s best, and the streets were sparse

He flipped up his collar, zipped his jacket, stared down and walked ahead.


Tracking the path of last night pub crawl is a not one for a weak stomach

But the daylight brings a harvest of the dropped memories and change.

The drunken words still hang stale in the air, the laughter, the slander

This morning someone awoke to a lifetime of regrets, he picked up a quarter.


The river is quiet as he sits on the rod iron bench seat and stares forward

Life behind him keeps moving, a runner huffing, a mother exclaiming

Two lovers arguing over another’s cheating words during a pub crawl


The sun will set earlier, the streets empty; he’ll head for his home again.

by Dave Schipper (c) 2017 Rose Riversongs

Sunday, July 26, 2009

The Ghosts of St. Augustine

Ghosts of St. Augustine by Dave Schipper © 2006 Rose Riversongs

The ghosts of St. Augustine are an eerie sight
On rooftops, porches, and trees they come out at night
They walk this ancient ground, while their stories are told
By guides with lanterns, recounting tales of old.

The white gown of the bride
The candle in the night
The widow on the stairs
The renters Miss Faye scares

Ghosts of St. Augustine
Are the sights to be seen
Walk the cobblestone streets
And enjoy whom you meet

Pass the Bishop’s shrine and see the wayward bride
Who terrified those children tenting that night
Woke them with a cold hand brought screams and bone chills
Now she walks alone, mourning a love unfulfilled.

As guest G-Men talked, the innkeeper knew the plan
She gave the smuggler signal with lantern in hand.
Today her lost soul slips past the boarded entry
To the sea, Her hooded figure waves a sentry