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Ragnarok

Our Trojan world is polarised to mourn;
To dream and find a black spot on the sun,
And wake to love and find our lover gone.

The destination of any weapon is grief.
In homesteads now where joy must seem naive
Under a splitting sky our women conceive.

The towns of houses, massed security
Out-generalled by a later century,
Are hearse-plumes on an old economy.

The ache of crushed walls when the raid is over.
This is a house, we said, we have built forever:
A two-backed fool, thinking of one day's weather.

Only one monster has to love his error.
Only his wrangling heart cannot recover,
But glories in illusion when half cadaver;

Or likes being ill, or nurses grievances,
Or calls a mountain or a forest 'his',
Or quarrels in five hundred languages.

And man, erect, unvenerable,
A bloodshot eye so simply vulnerable
That half his history is marginal,

Incises stone in the Bastille of hate:
'Give us this day before it is too late
Something to love indeed, enough to eat.'

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Comments


  • October 4, 2007
    Edit | Reply
    From guest Cole (contact)
    A great use of words, very beautiful

  • spartan117
    February 26, 2007
    Edit | Reply
    I agree, excellent descriptions and metaphors, etc. This should be much more well known...


  • AndrewHide
    July 14, 2005
    Edit | Reply
    A very powerful use of word and image. This is a fantastic piece of poetry, which I have never read before. I'm suprised this piece is not more popular and better known.


    Andrew