Hair
There once was a girl in Barbados
Who envied her sister’s hair.
She herself wasn’t pretty,
As plain as a pear,
Oh, but she wished herself fair.
In town she heard tale of a witch
Who lived somewhere south in her lair.
It was said she had magic
Most others would scare,
But a wish she could grant, if you dared.
So off in the night the girl went
And found the old witchdoctor’s lair.
“Oh please,” said she,
“My own hair is dull,
And my sister’s cannot be compared!”
The witch coughed a throaty old laugh
And winked an odd eye at her plea,
“Bring her,” said she,
“It’s a simple revision,
If you give me a proper fee.”
“I’ve nothing to give,” said the girl in tears,
“I’ve no gift nor coin to offer.
Is there anything else,
Some food, or some wine,
I can give you instead to be proper?”
“Never mind gifts,” the witchdoctor answered,
“I’ve no use for coins or meals.
Some wine would be nice,
But not for this vice,
When you come, I will ask for my deal.”
So back the girl went to her sister
And sought out the witch the next night.
“What are we doing?”
Asked the dear sister,
“It’s cold and these woods are a fright!”
They soon found the witchdoctor’s hut,
And saw she made two straw dolls.
“These are for you,”
The witchdoctor chuckled,
“Now watch as I fix your qualm!”
They jumped as she tore the straw heads
And switched the dolls’ bodies anew.
Their own heads followed suit,
And they screamed a high tune,
Throats crooked and stitched all askew.
“Now for my fare,” the witchdoctor heckled,
“You’ve gotten your beautiful hair.
All I ask is your service,
From now till the End,
Until Death meets me, if He dares.”
One Little Light
One little light falls from the clouds
Catch it, catch it, tumbling down
One little light now in your grasp
Lucky, lucky, are you now
One little light shines from your lamp
Sighing, sighing, lying down
One little light now blinking out
Going, going, now it’s drowned
One little light’s time has begun
Growing, growing, brightening more
One little light draws one new gasp
Breathe in, breathe in, shine once more
Does It Even Matter?
Sometimes we all forget to breathe
Sometimes we lose the will to sing
We try so hard
Don't need to fall
To feel the biting, numbing crawl
The little things that drown us all
Can break us, hate us, choke our call
And the ravens soon will follow
All our skeletons tomorrow
Scars we court become the habit
In their grim divide we salve it
Digging deeper, bleeding cleaner
One cut closer to the femur
Strangers pull beneath our skin
Flailing dolls we writhe to swim
Six feet under our own shame
And we’re the catalysts to blame
But if we knew our maladies
Could act as someone’s remedies
For those who listened, those who screamed
Those who felt the pain we sing
Would it lift them up to know?
Would the numbness let them go?
If memories we thought remised,
Were reasons we were missed?
It hurts to know you’re none the wiser
Of the souls you had inspired
For now we know we can defend
That it does matter in the end