The Jackalope
THE JACKALOPE
In the cracked silence of desert,
where earth curls itself into dry, weathered lips,
the Jackalope prowls.
Not seen, but felt —
like the heat on a summer afternoon,
the shimmer that warps the horizon.
Not a beast, but a symbol—
of survival, of endurance,
of what happens when myth and landscape
fuse together to make something unforgettable,
something that lives forever in bone-deep silence.
The settlers, thirsty for something beyond horizon,
spoke of it in low, guarded tones—
Ears and horns, the eyes too bright,
a myth cast in the shadow of hardship and sky.
The Jackalope was a wild thing,
too elusive, too odd, too tied to the land's strange blood and bruises.
It roams as both phantom and truth, woven into the sunburnt fabric of history,
not quite real, not quite gone.
It never stops running,
never stays long enough to be pinned down,
slipping in and out of time,
where history blurs
and the truth of the land is both wild and impossible.
The Jackalope is more than myth.
It is a ghost that haunts the desert, the creature that never existed,
but somehow always did.
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This cryptid mythology shared with those who are unbelievable over at DVerse Poets Pub.
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Chris, I saw one's head hanging on the wall in a little bar in Coopersville the day I turned 18 when I went in to have my first legal drink after working my shift at the little bakery a couple of doors down. Is the jackalope real? It's real enough. You certainly brought its spirit to life in your poem <3 Anyone who knows about the jackalope will love your poem.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting almost prose like poem. This is Eric btw
ReplyDeleteThis is my first encounter with a Jackalope, Chris, and it’s a haunting one. I love the way you set the scene with the phrases ‘cracked silence of desert, where earth curls itself into dry, weathered lips’ and ‘the shimmer that warps the horizon’ – I felt the heat! – and the thought that ‘myth and landscape fuse together to make something unforgettable, something that lives forever in bone-deep silence’. The way you described the creature is so scary.
ReplyDeleteThose creations are so fun to think of... we have a similar one in Sweden called a skvader which is the front of a hare and the back of a capercaillie (a bird of the woods)
ReplyDeleteThe Jackalope sounds as risky as our drop bears!
ReplyDeleteDennis Ryle - never Anonymous!
DeleteNicely done!
ReplyDeleteNice work my friend! Don’t get around much, but glad I stopped by.
ReplyDelete"When myth and landscape fuse together...." What a wonderful thought........I love that he roams as both phantom and truth. A wonderful creature!
ReplyDelete