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The knight inquired about the lands which lay beyond the mountains. Strange and savage, she replied. And there be no respectin' of gentlemanly ways. But where am I to go? the knight did wail. I am old, and my vassals have driven me from my estate. There is another way, the hag replied. To the north runs a canyon your horse might jump. Beyond it stands the ash Verity, who wields a branch of mistletoe on her nether limbs. Pass beneath this bough, and you will be freely admitted into Paradise. Perceval thanked her warmly and bid her adieu. The canyon, though deep, was narrow, and Perceval the Brave did not quake at the sight of it. He galloped his red steed to the edge of the precipice and flew into the air. Knight and horse fell with a resounding crash to the rocks below. There, atop the bones of myriad knights and noble mounts, they were eventually buried beneath eroded soil, and in The Year of Our Lord 1911, were overlaid by the shining tracks which bore the fastest train you ever saw: Engine One Hundred and Forty-Three.
Copyright © Wanda Waterman St. Louis, 2007. All Rights Reserved. Used by permission of the author.
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| Wanda Waterman St. Louis is a Canadian freelance writer whose poetry has been published in The Talking Leaves, Descant, Pottersfield Portfolio, Tigertail and The Voice, Our Times, as well as on the CKUA Radio website. She won second prize for Drama in the 1998-1999 George Elliott Clarke Literary Competition for her stage play Wildflowers. She currently produces a comic strip called "Chronicles of Cruiscin Lan" for Athabasca University's webzine The Voice and writes devotionals for Maranatha. As a volunteer Wanda has worn many hats: she has written publicity for several non-profit organisations, worked as an announcer, producer, and interviewer on campus radio (CKDU, Dalhousie), organized a wind ensemble, served as a deacon, and was instrumental in unionising a workplace, for which she produced a monthly newsletter, The Union Maid. |
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