Entry Point
Ants colonized it - huge abodes littered with the dead (leaves, sticks, the occasional granulated insect piled high, totemic-fashion) reaping a fortune in scenery, though probably not food Ojibways were next - their tell-tale encampment by pocket-sized waterfall, inlets off a winding cataract & moss, loam-thick with black soil a future arboreal dream inching over rock, darling crevice for northern orchid, then kiss of red death the hybrid trillium & more sinister cousin, jack-in-the-pulpit for Indian foragers. Animistic limestone shone hands, poked thru the forest with stealth, petroglyphic lava beds - a cougar pouncing - runic carvings the cold in the Giant's stone nostrils billowing off the lake like a presence.
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"Ants colonized it..."
This evocative piece by Paul Cameron Brown, titled "Entry Point", represents a masterful exploration of classic. The lines capture a profound emotional resonance... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...