Iapetus Ascendant*
Upon
the shore of the world-ocean,
Dwelt
a hermit: old, and broken,
Sieving
colored sands that made a carpet by its door,
It
shed a dirty tear for long-forgotten Singapore.
Each
hovel-wall bore token,
Of
a myriad sad emotions,
Like
the scars of countless battles which its withered body bore.
Its
gender wasn't clear
And
is not recorded here,
For
its natal sex was altered many times to its distress,
Yet
every soft caress came to it like a breathless yes,
And
it seemed to view with lust,
Bodies
with or without bust.
(It
had formerly pursued each sex to passionate excess.)
From
the hermit's hut extended,
Great
Iapetus, distended,
A
watery abyss like none had been since days of yore,
When
Panthalassa died 200 million years before.
The
waves that shaped the beach,
Had
excessive fetch and reach,
Having
come around the globe to spend their lives against the shore.
The
hermit gazes on a land,
That's
broken: burnt and barren sand.
Forgotten
cities buried sleep where skulking shadows whilom creep,
And
toxins still are wont to seep, like secrets which the graveyards
keep...
And
sullen aborigines,
Lacking
hope or energies,
listless
roam the groaning heaps of lava where the geysers leap.
Still
the Sea in ceaseless pounding,
Churns
and batters its surrounding,
Races
from each crumbling shore to lash the rocks a little more.
Far
below the heaving surface silver fishes by the score,
Fleetly
flutter through the rubble,
Of
a world past any trouble,
Countless
bones lie dreaming there of empires gone forevermore.
*Iapetus
was the ancestral Atlantic Ocean. Panthalassa was the ancestral (and
much larger) Pacific.
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