The Tale that Couldn't be ToldA Poem by David Lewis PagetHe’d been tapping away at the keyboard So he could get the ending straight, A labour of love he’d called it But it was dark, and getting late, The villain had to be sorted out By the heroine, called Cath, He wanted it all to jell before That final paragraph.
The Moon had risen outside and shone In a strange and subdued light, He should have finished before, so this Was not a welcome sight. He backspaced over a typo, then He looked hard up at the screen, But all that he’d typed was gibberish, In a font he’d never seen.
It must have jumped to another font Was the first thing that he thought, So he scrolled back up, to see how much Of his work had gone for nought. The font looked vaguely Arabian With a hint of Russian too, Had taken all of his storyline So he didn’t know what to do.
He tried to highlight the paragraph And switch to the font he’d used, But when he read what the wording said It had left him quite confused. ‘You’ve stumbled in to a place of sin Have opened an ancient page, Locked down for over a thousand years You’ve opened the world to rage.’
‘Delete the whole of the manuscript, Don’t let it stick in your head, The more you read you will feel a need And will probably end up dead. Delete the curse, and the final verse And destroy your hard-drive too, Be sure, if you wish to stay alive, To do what I tell you to!’
He thought of the work that he’d put in And the rebel within him stirred, ‘Why should I wear some other’s sin When I only have your word?’ The screen grew misty, and Cath appeared, The heroine of his tale, ‘Take no notice of him, my dear, I’ll die if his will prevails.’
His villain pushed her out of the way And snarled at him through the screen, ‘Where do you think my evil comes from, Not from some fictional scheme! You drew me out of an ancient well Of lies, of sin and deceit, To clear me out of your sub-conscious You’d better hit the delete!’
He heard the footsteps pound up the stairs And beat on his garret door, ‘You’d better not have my wife in there, Or else, I’ve told you before!’ And Cath appeared for the final time In the tale that wasn’t complete, His neighbour beat on the padlocked door As he sighed, and hit the delete.
David Lewis Paget © 2015 David Lewis PagetFeatured Review
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17 Reviews Added on May 20, 2015 Last Updated on May 20, 2015 Tags: ancient, rage, manuscript, curse Author
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