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Rhinoceros & the Bird
I can’t show any weakness
around you. I can’t be weak
while standing next to the grand rhinoceros
that you are. Your skin is impenetrable armor,
shiny like silver. Your horn is like a sword,
swift and deadly. The power in your muscles
is enough to move mountains
and alter the landscape at whim.
You change it as you please.
Go ahead.
You deserve it.
After all, the mountains are only movable
to you therefore it is in your right
to go ahead and move them simply
because no one else can. Do you think
how it will affect the lives of those around you?
The crocodiles, the termites, the lions?
They live here the same as you. They pretend
they don’t hate the sound of your marching,
the narcissist booms that not only announce
your arrival into the savannah, but demand
respect from all of us lonely and pitiful animals
who are mere subjects to your magnificence.
The lions bow their heads so low
their muzzles graze the dirt,
as if the lion has the status of a dung beetle.
It is a shameful sight
to see the lions demeaned
in such a fashion. It disgusts me
how you walk past them as they bow down
to you without even blinking an eye at them,
recognizing their abiding by your frivolous laws.
The one time they don’t surrender
themselves to your tyranny,
is the moment you seem to notice
them. You roar out and crash
down ancient trees, muddy the water,
destroy meerkat tunnels, and try to wreak havoc
upon our savannah.
Mistake. I may be a pitiful heron
but I can see the anger you’ve sparked
in the lion’s heart.
The next day, there was no march
down the savannah by the one and only
rhinoceros. In fact, there was no rhinoceros.
The savannah seemed to finally
be at peace.
Even the lions seemed extra well fed today.
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