![]() Of Civilization and DisenchantmentA Poem by Michael R. BurchSuddenly uncomfortable to stay at my grandfather’s house (actually his third new wife’s) in her daughter’s bedroom --one interminable summer with nothing to do, all the meals served cold, even beans and peas-- Lacking the words to describe ah!, those pearl-lustrous estuaries-- strange omens, incoherent nights. Seeing the flares of the river barges illuminating Memphis, city of bluffs and dying splendors. Drifting toward Alexandria, Pharos, Rhakotis, Djoser’s fertile delta, lands at the beginning of a new time and “civilization.” Leaving behind sixty miles of unbroken cemetery, Alexander’s corpse floating seaward, bobbing, milkwhite, in a jar of honey. Memphis shall be waste and desolate, without an inhabitant. Or so the people dreamed, in chains. Published by The Centrifugal Eye and in The Centrifugal Eye Fifth Anniversary Anthology © 2019 Michael R. Burch |
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Added on August 15, 2019 Last Updated on August 15, 2019 Author
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