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Swoop: 5 
 
She might have said:
 
"I do so love these fireworks,sparkles of bright moment,
 an insistence in the sky,
 flowering.
 
 
Then the pub,friends,
 the usual walk home.
 
And a familiar stranger passes on,his eyes clutch madness
 as though it were an overcoat
 in a bitter wind.
 
We slow,we gather time around us.
 
Then, in a luminous darkon the edge of lamp-post light,
 a something on the ground
 breathes.
 
It is that madman,a man collapsed,
 shivering in the summer night.
 
And his eyes open anger,and the street light
 loses the power to form.
 
And it seems to mehe has a need
 to strike his agony out,
 to find its poisoning heart,
 but that dark agony, devious,
 telescopes his sight away
 to those who flaunt existence,
 coincidence.
 
And I knowas a bigot dare not look inside himself
 to see his source of death,
 so a madman, insane, cannot.
 
So he attacks when his agony tolls,and his agony tolls at us.
 
And in this tidal darknessI hear him howl his agony howl, a migraine howl,
 and my instinct grips my reason dead,
 and I run.
 
But his howls retreat beyond the distanceto someone else's problem,
 and I relax,
 and I, alone,
 I let my pride
 walk me slowly home."
 
And this is what she might have said,but she won't.
 
The bastard,he:
 me,
 I had a knife.
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