Scribbles From the End: Apocalypse Love
By Vladislas32
- 1193 reads
The government is coming back today.
Their great black bulldogs are coming,
Trundling into our grey city
And turning its ashy bones to splinters under their feet.
We were able to keep them out while they were starving.
Yes, even they starved in the days that belonged to Calamity,
But now they starve no more and they are coming back.
And they remember the Molotovs and the hunting rifles.
The shrouded airlift dropped in yesterday
And plucked the secret noses from our hospitality.
Caught them right up and hoisted them to ill-gotten safety.
We knew that the noses were probably here,
We just weren't sure who they were
And we found out too late:
When they were taken away,
We knew with a twisting in our guts
That the bulldogs would not be far behind.
We the People assembled at the intersection of Third and Blue Hill
Behind barricades made out of sandbags
And our grandparents’ furniture.
Who would have thought that the old relics
Would serve as forts at our age?
Behind the barricade, I stand pressed against Phoebe.
I would call her My Phoebe,
But how could I?
What right have I to claim her
When that is all she has left to herself?
We look to each other,
Linking arms and eyes
And remembering ourselves.
Remembering the ancient dock…
Where we sat and watched America’s final May 15th
Wake up and haul itself over the horizon…
Where we sat as her namesake sang an ode
To the peachy rays that mapped her gentle, loving contours…
Where we sat while the lake breeze played with her hair.
A heat-flash and a glass-crash later,
And the dock is gone,
Along with the sun and the namesake.
She is a different map now:
Hunger has carved gullies in her face
Eaten a valley into her belly
And strip-mined her flesh taut over her ribs.
She is so tired.
Sleep runs from her searching grasp
Like a child playing a game of Tag.
The strangled night sky seeps into her red-rimmed eyes
And I can do nothing
But squeeze a little bit of cold out of her body.
She stares up to the void
Like we once did in the field on sticky summer nights,
Finding diamond masterpieces floating in the ink
While fireflies watched over us
And faeries danced in wooded hollows,
But now the deep blue pools have been asphyxiated and cauterised
And timidly clasped hands have been replaced
By quivering, clinging bodies.
The bulldogs lumber closer
As I trace her with a ragged, December-nibbled hand:
Through dirtied obsidian-silk strands,
Over cheekbone bluffs,
Coming to rest on ocean crest lips
Before falling away.
We draw nearer,
Pressing the setting blood sun between us
As our lips brush together filled with love and languor.
It is a farewell that wrings out our chests
Like the sturdy hands of our mothers wrung out dishtowels.
The truncheon speeds toward our skulls
While we ask how our fishing poles and plastic canteens
Turned into empty guns and broken bottles.
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Comments
Some very poignant, powerful
Some very poignant, powerful moments here. I think this would also work as a narrative.
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I enjoyed the poem, very
I enjoyed the poem, very evocative. It conjours up strong images, although, as with much poetry I do not feel I have understood the whole story.
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Vivid imagery, so much so I
Vivid imagery, so much so I saw this as anime.
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