| Shambling down the roadside
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| Cheering as he goes
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| A manic, flailing cretin
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| In filthy, tattered clothes
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| Dead things are his playmates
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| He takes them in his care
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| Clutching limbs and tails
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| He whips roadkill through the air
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| He uses them in puppet shows
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| Hung around his shack
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| Stuffs his backpack full of fur
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| Some bloody—most are flat
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| Tied onto his belt of rope
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| A skirt of sunbaked stink
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| Running out of furry friends
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| He strokes their pelts and thinks
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| Setting makeshift traps
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| He titters and he claps
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| Birdies, fish, and rats
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| Are crammed in burlap sacks
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| He drags the critters to the street
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| Waits for cars to pass
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| Then throws them at the tire wells
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| It kills them very fast
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| Sometimes lucky animals
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| Scurry past unharmed
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| Cretin screams and gives up chase
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| But catching them is hard
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| Drags them from their dens
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| Yanks them from their pens
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| They bite his scabby hand
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| He tosses them again
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| One day running after prey
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| A stormy winter day
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| An orange van hits the man
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| And breaks both of his legs
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| He drags himself back to his fort
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| Despite the biting pain
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| And wraps himself in animals
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| Roadkill that he made |