Brickleberry Swede © Surazeus 2024 01 18 The old blind man who paints dots on the fence asks the boy who constructs half-broken raft if he would carry him on his strong back so they can escape dank prison of clowns, but Brickleberry Swede laughs with the clock in trunk of the oak on the hill of bones. The one-eyed crone who gathers red mushrooms from alleyway behind the car garage asks the boy with the straw hat on his head if he might know the way to paradise, but Brickleberry Swede weeps for the girl murdered by her husband when she escaped. The round businessman in the pin-striped suit who calculates value of everything asks the boy who never wears shoes or socks to steal the lucky horseshoe of his wife, but Brickleberry Swede scrambles the bets so nobody wins when the horses race. The prim librarian in the purple skirt who hides books she stole in the empty tomb asks the boy who plays guitar with no strings if he would play chess with Death in her stead, but Brickleberry Swede helps free the slaves by singing holy hymns in church of fools. The logical twin brother of King Lear who formulates new unified field theory asks the boy who swings on vines among trees if he would rescue Rapunzel from jail, but Brickleberry Swede climbs Ararat to hear Noah lecture on hurricanes. The sweet twin sister of Queen Melusine who operates the water-treatment plant asks the boy who writes television shows if he would like to ride Bucephalus, but Brickleberry Swede drives army tank to demolish homes in Garden of Eden. The husband of the wicked witch of Oz who sells fake cryptocurrency to bankers asks the boy who tends his potato crop if he would vote for Zeus as president, but Brickleberry Swede drives truck with food for refugees driven from home by war. The wife of the dictator on the throne who embroiders demons on handkerchiefs asks the boy who writes novels about gods if he would make new mask for Artemis, but Brickleberry Swede goes home each night to watch old movies with his nameless wife.
Surazeus Astarius Συράζευς Αστάριος. Cartographer. Epic Poet. Hermead epic poem about Philosophers 126,680 lines of blank verse. http://tinyurl.com/AstarianScriptures
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