The Outlaw and the
Snake
The man pithered; the
snake slithered.
Their paths crossed;
neither withered.
A ragged tumbleweed
skipped along,
bisected them and
then was gone.
A swirl of dust in
the waning light
marked the spot
where the two would fight.
The snake reared
up and shook his rattle.
The man clenched
fists to engage in battle.
Surprised the man
was holding ground,
the snake inquired
in a hissing sound.
Of my venom don’t you
dread?
Surely my bite
will kill you dead.
It’s me you should
fear the man then said.
He tipped the hat
upon his head.
My evil soul the
Devil will beckon.
What flows my
veins will kill you I reckon.
The snake gave
thought to hesitation.
For even he sought
self-preservation.
A nearby tree offered
safe protection.
He glided up at
his own election.
Coiled on branch he
spoke with curiosity.
Man, what set your
blood to toxicity?
For I have never
known a person
whose blood
ingested could slay a serpent.
I shot a man and stole
his treasure.
Spent the bulk at
a house of pleasure.
Bought some
whiskey and a bird that sings.
Lost the rest to a
pair of Kings.
We snakes kill too
for food we need,
but never do we
kill for greed.
Taking a life, a
sin committed.
By your laws is
that permitted?
According to laws
of man and God,
a killer’s corpse
shall rot in sod.
But first he’ll
hang from swinging noose,
his neck stretched
long like wild goose.
Yet here you stand
above the mud,
your heart still
pumping tainted blood.
Of killing has
your appetite whet.
I wonder do you
feel regret?
The cost of sins
may be deferred,
but due in full
when body interred.
Until the hangman hoists
me high,
I’ll do as I
please and some may die.
With no remorse
for evil employed,
a man like you
should be destroyed.
I fear the bite
would kill me too.
A fine dilemma,
what to do?
Strike me now or shut
your mouth.
I’ve men to kill
both north and south.
He spat some chaw
in the desert soil,
and passed below
the dangling coil.
To pierce the skin
would risk infection,
so the snake pursued
another direction.
He looped his body
in a knot
and hung the
outlaw on the spot.
Parker Fendler - has been conjuring up poems and stories ever since he could dream. He recently began transcribing them after waking. His work has appeared in Sixfold, Across the Margin, Amarillo Bay, Potato Soup Journal, Penmen Review, Suddenly and Without Warning, and Corvus Review.
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