Earl Beardie at Glamis (A Legend)
By Angusfolklore
- 186 reads
He sits in a narrow chamber forever,
throwing dice with the Devil,
wearily feigning outrage
at Auld Hornie's underhand tactics.
The dice rattle like bad bones;
corpse knuckles in a cup
constructed from human flesh.
The room reeks of unwashed
evil pent up for five hundred
years and then some.
Earl Alexander expectorates,
gobs hatred on the sawdust bare floor,
hating himself, but Satan more.
This was the deal he made:
being prey to endless
underhand card tricks,
loaded dice chicanery.
'You know you can stop this
any time.' The Devil smiles.
Beardie damns him fulsomely,
only the way a fifteenth century
noble madman would know.
To give him his due,
the Devil only winks,
begins another game.
Beardie pulls on his long
white beard, as if it was a
bell pull to summon angels.
His armour chafes alarmingly
after these long centuries.
'I'm only doing what each man does;
rolling for another chance,
day in, day out.
Never doubt I'll win,
fiend of hell.'
'O well.'
Satan laughs. There are other things
he might be doing,
but it seems restful after
overthrowing empires,
tempting Christ,
to incrementally nick
this souls, quite slowly
through the centuries.
'Quite nice,' Satan mumbles.
Beardie throws the
dice at him.
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Comments
aye, the devil is a cheater
aye, the devil is a cheater as we all know.
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