Sasquatch in Verse…

Squatchspeare in Love

Together we shall scale the tallest trees

to breed among the Redwoods in the rain.

We’ll scrabble up the steepest granite screes

and make our beds in leaves where we have lain.

When hunkering in snow-dens that we share,

with warmth like ours, we won’t need underwear!

I live to contemplate your tawny hair–

its mats arranged exquisitely with care

When I’m out hunting rabbits in the glen,

you stay behind to nest in groves of sage–your musk attracting mobs of other men

whose growls and wood-knocks aggravate my rage!

Your wry smile stained with huckleberry wine

Says, “Take a number, hot stuff, get in line…”

Song of Squatchaway

I’ve followed in your footsteps with great care:

Their prints are not exactly hard to spy,

especially when you leave tufts of hair

in clumps among the trees seven feet high.

A wiry, manly form of brown and black

and musk of eau de skunk and dead raccoon,

I find your silhouette simple to track

through underbrush beneath the silver moon.

If I were human, I would have the clout

to demonstrate I know just what I’m doing!

With photo proof, I would allay all doubt

That you are real–a guy who’s worth pursuing!

But soft! What snapping sound breaks nigh yon crag?

It’s tree-branch-speak for, “Tiny wants a shag!”

Squatchy

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Stephanie L. Harper lives with her husband, two children, two dogs, two guinea pigs, and a cat in Hillsboro, OR, where she works as a Writer and Home Schooling Parent.
In some of her former incarnations, she taught college-level language and literature courses, and earned an M.A. in German literature from the University of Wisconsin – Madison; she also studied at the Northwest House of Theological Studies (where she ostensibly excelled at “answering the call to ministry”), until she became disillusioned with aspirations of “Mastering Divinity,” and finally (re)embraced her current occupation as a Poet.
Stephanie’s poems have appeared (or are scheduled to appear) in Sixfold magazine and Wild Leaf Press Quarterly, and she was a finalist in the Atlanta Review’s 2015 International Poetry Competition.