The Sadness of the Shells

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I recently went to Tybee Island, Georgia (USA) for a writing retreat. There, I collected sea shells, which I brought home. The following sadness ensued.


THE SADNESS OF THE SHELLS

by Marian Allen


I walked on the beach in December

And picked up some shells from the beach.

I made it a point to remember

What posters endeavor to teach:

Do not collect living crustaceans

But only the ones that are dead.

Inspect each with infinite patience.

Yes, that's what the posters had said.


I thought I had followed the order

In gathering gifts from the foam

And socked away shells like a hoarder

And packed them and carried them home.

I showed them to this one and that one

Who "ooh"ed o'er each lovely shell

Including one wonderful flat one.

And then the shells started to smell.


I washed them in hot soapy water

And put them to drain on a rack.

"They stink the place up!" said my daughter,

So I packed them back in a sack.

I soaked them in bleach and the flat one

Came open. My sorrowing eyes

Beheld the sad truth, which was that one

Was not a legitimate prize.


It had, in fact, contained two living creatures

With gooshiness and stinkiness their features.

So I'm repaid for taking what was living.

The smell is everlasting, unforgiving.

Oh, Mortal! take a lesson from this telling!

Be very, very careful in your shelling.


Okay, so I rinsed all the shells off, threw away the stinky one, washed the remaining ones in hot soapy water again … And they STILL smell. Is it residue from having been packed with Neptune's Vengeance, or do I have another Hideous Surprise lurking? Time will tell. Time. Will. Tell.


WRITING PROMPT: An innocent mistake rebounds disastrously.


MA


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Published on January 12, 2012 05:48
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