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She lived with her father in an 18th century chateau
The very age when Sade's brain went for a walk Only to come back with a testament of horrors Neighbors and doctors pitied mum and dad The day they saw her wayward looks and customs Mum was the lady of the land A rigid silhouette with pious manners But no one was as good as daddy Nor with so handsome an allure The two would climb the hills of coal for hours And she was smitten with his dreams of her None of such fictions would come true though They had to cope with the grim concept She was too shy a nature to be schooled Some days she heard the silly chuckles Of youngsters rushing home from classes That was a noise which always soured her mood Until disrupted by her mummy's pancakes And by her daddy knocking on the front door She was the happiest with them It was so nice to watch the good old Doris Days Throughout the good old Wednesday evenings All gathered by a pot of tea Together Their castle was a solemn wreck Ivy and moist chaining its daunting walls Madonnas paling on the ceiling And port-fenetres stained by fog She become lady of the land A patron to her ailing father The day her mother died While praying in the kiosk Their manor turned into a moody foster-home Where she and daddy keenly sweet-talked And pillow-fought each other Not all was joyous in those days though Autumn would come and sweep the brides away And every year they'd get younger than her Skin smoothing in prenuptial glory She kept her dream of wedding some day Although the beaus she happened to encounter Would creep away from her politely And laugh behind her back with fellow nubiles The day her 40th January came She felt it was time to grow up She switched paper planes with macramé Trying to sooth daddy's arthritis with gobelins His cheer succumbed to brittle moans each day Sometimes he was simply too much to bear Until the day he spared her from his grumps The very day she saw him lying shrunk Limbs cramped under a snow of moths Sheets eaten by dandruff and lice It was as if she saw him for the first time After a long surreal dream How could that sorry pack of bones Amount to daddy? Men came with ugly big machines As from an era she was unfamiliar with They pulled her benumbed body out of home And tore her castle down to dust So baby walked away in dread and lonely The air was new, the buildings tall and crowded Nothing felt normal anymore There was no tiny shred of obsolete Fat cars screaming with people Houses where folks jostled each other To watch enormous colored screens talk Women and men, women and women Would touch each others' lips in cabarets – The horror! Her mummy had long taught her of the mortal sin Which spreads far from the eye who's watching All that she had once known so surely Had left no crumbs behind for her to follow Ahead was an odd ball of intersections The latest trick she could not learn What would become of her Where would she take her laddered stockings? Stray dogs, stray cats, stray her Synonymous between the rusty leaves of fall Leftovers of some whimsy womb Laughed at by naked bellies.
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