74. Triquatrain -- The Unnamable One

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The 99 Poem Challenge
Fox-Trot-9

74. Triquatrain — The Unnamable One

1

We still talk of the days when the blighted one stays
   At the house of the fiends in the air;
But please whisper those words, so that not even birds
   Will heed us in our tale—so beware!

It was on a sad morrow, our hearts filled with sorrow
   For the death of our beautiful queen;
So we donned on our armor, each noble and each farmer,
   To make haste to the place where she'd been.

For once she was fair; now rests with a prayer
   That she holds on her lips in her silence;
For once we were strong, so bold and so young,
   Until she was taken with such violence

That she died in her struggles to give birth and her knuckles
   Had become so clenched-up and so white;
And right there she expired on her bedside so tired,
   So worn out in her birth-pains that night.

And the heir that she bore struck a pall in the core
   Of all those in attendance with fright;
So we took the small devil and committed the evil
   That still stalks us with fear in the night.

For the name that the queen had given on the scene
   Of her struggle and screaming and death
Has become a bad word that only was heard
   In the curses of her dying last breath:

"May the pains that I bear drift up to the air!
   May the face of this babe disappear!
I would rather be dead than bear up the head
   Of the Devil's own son over here!"

And for those who have heard our queen utter such words,
   We will take to our graves when we die;
For we fear that unnamable and horribly damnable
   Sion of the queen's frightened eye.

For the baby was evil, a son of the devil,
   With the eyes of a demon's so black
And the body of an imp whose limbs were so limp
   That he barely could move on his back.

So frightened we were at the sight of it there
   That we took it and buried it alive;
And the screams of despair were the stuff of nightmares
   As it struggled to cry and survive.

But we dared not to bash it with shovels or lash it
   With ropes to obstruct it's foul screams,
For we feared that to draw the baby's blood raw
   On the dirt would then haunt us in dreams.

And since then we have tried to forget and to hide
   All the horrors that we have all seen;
And since then we still live and try to forgive
   Our most heinous wrongdoing of our queen.

2

Now it's been twenty years, and the tracks of our tears
   Are but memories long-buried in toil;
So we thought we were free from the hideous memory
   Of the baby deformed as a gargoyle.

But in the twentieth year since the fading of the fear,
   There arose a depression of sadness,
Which took over the township in a panic so severe
   That the township descended into madness.

For the specter of the baby that had killed their fair lady,
   Their lost queen, has returned to on the town;
And the ones that remember have rekindled the slow ember
   Of those fearful old days in their breakdown.

For the specter will prey on the youth where they stay;
   They are dying right before the old eyes
Of those cursed to remember the killing of one member
   Who should have lived to survive his first cries.

But this world is so cruel, and every soul is a fool
   To believe in the goodness of adults;
And so the specter will gain from the small ones that remain
   By entering their nightmares with results

Too hideous to mistake for a nightmare so fake
   That adults will still refuse to believe;
But deep in their hearts, they will shiver in all parts
   For the horrors that they will receive.

For it comes in the night just outside of their sight
   When the children will breathe out their last;
And when that day shall come, they will all be struck dumb
   As they find out their judgement has passed.

For where children stay, so the blighted one will sway
   All the children to ascend to the air,
Where he takes them away full of laughter so gay,
   While the adults on their knees sink in prayer.

But their prayers go unanswered, and their hopes will be shattered,
   As slowly one-by-one they die out;
And their words as they die will fade out as a sigh
   Upon the alter of repentance that cries out:

"And so we have sinned and are now left behind
   To die out in this plague of slow days;
And so we that remain must all answer for the slain,
   The cause of our dying in this craze!"

And now we that persist in this maddening mist
   Of remembrances ere we shall depart
Are now cursed to remember in quieted whisper
   Of the days when the calamities start.

So we still talk of the days when the blighted one stays
   At the house of the fiends in the air;
But please whisper those words, so that not even birds
   Will heed us in our tale—so beware!

(To be continued...)

A/N: The Triquatrain, created by Robert L. Huntsman, is a quatrain poem in tri-rhyme with a specific rhyming pattern, in which lines 1 and 3 have internal rhyme whereas lines 2 and 4 do not. This poem can be of any length or subject and does not require perfect meter.

Meter: Iambic (Varies)
Rhyme:

Line 1: a-a
Line 2: b
Line 3: c-c
Line 4: b

Line 1: d-d
Line 2: e
Line 3: f-f
Line 4: e

Line 1: g-g
Line 2: h
Line 3: i-i
Line 4: h...

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