Saturday, February 4, 2023

On Her Own


 https://www.instagram.com/explore/tags/insomniamag/


damn near impossible

separating Bonnie from Clyde

co-stars in a macabre drama

sweet faced beauty

a romantic .. poet .. killer

a dichotomy

using sex and sass

robbery .. murder .. all in a day's work

~~ until twenty-six bullets

stopped her cold






18 comments:

  1. That was my favorite image too. What a great idea you had to write about Bonnie and Clyde. I didn't know she wrote poetry. I will search for some.

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  2. Poor Bonnie -- I liked them, heros (??) perhaps because they were sort of Midwesterners. And they drove and old Ford car. I have two of those, had three before we lost our large garage. I too used this image.
    ..

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  3. So much for due process eh? I've always wondered how it was okay for Hoover and his G Men to basically slaughter all those gangsters. Only one of them wasn't killed--I believe it was Machine Gun Kelly. Bonnie was indeed a poet. She and Clyde were just poor kids from Dallas without much prospects. Clyde's experience in prison was so brutal that he disfigured his foot just to get out. It made him determined never to go back. The motorcycle cops they killed were actually shot by an associate who was with them that day. Up until then, they hadn't wanted to kill anyone. So much for that, I guess. They weren't heroes, but they weren't evil, either. Did you know that Bonnie hated those famous photos of her with a cigar? They took them as a joke. "Now everyone thinks I smoke cigars," she complained. A former friend betrayed them and pretended his car had broken down, knowing they would slow down to see. That's when they were ambushed by a posse in concealment that shot them umpty-seven times. Pretty gruesome stuff, not to mention blatantly illegal. The death car toured the country as an attraction flr years after.

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  4. She lived her life the way she wanted to, and I bet she didn't regret a moment of it. Good write on that image, Helen.

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  5. This was well worth the wait Helen! The story of Bonnie and Clyde is both exciting and very sobering. Your ending captured that well. I knew two different people that had seen them that lived in north Texas. I was always so fascinated by that. So glad you are with us this week my friend! We have missed you so much!

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  6. Dearest Helen,
    So glad that at age 24 I was not stopped by 26 bullets...
    What a wasteful life and for what?!
    Hugs,
    Mariette

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  7. Caught up in the red tide of the world, innocence swept under. Loved your retelling here Helen. Wonderfully written my friend… 🙂✌🏼❣️

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  8. To take on the authorities is always an attractive theme. It tests the wiles and reaction while running with guns blazing. It can be heroic in many ways, Helen!

    Hank

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  9. That's pretty much the whole story in a nutshell, Helen! Well written!

    Sincerely,
    David
    SkepticsKaddish.com

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  10. Brush off the myth and glimpse the human for a moment.

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  11. Great take on the photo prompt :0

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  12. Thats a lot of bullets for the killing. Interesting narrative poem. Happy you dropped by my blog Helen.

    Much❤love

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  13. A delightful interpretation of the image! Bravo!

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  14. That's a terrifying photograph honestly, but you really help it with your poem, and going back to a historical (and even cinematic) moment--your poem fine without the photo frankly! Thanks. K. (Manicddaily)

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  15. She packed a lot into her short life, and into your short but brilliant poem!

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  16. A dichotomy indeed! And you captured it so well.

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  17. Just perfect for this photo. Girl living life on the edge.

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I appreciate each of you and the comments you leave ~~ thanks so much.