I Can Die With Joy © Surazeus 2022 12 20 If I want to walk to the mountain top I will dive to the bottom of the sea and there find the blind demon of my heart still lurking in the shadows of despair, then I will grow angel wings of desire and fly up to the palace in the clouds. Yet I walk from the front door of my house and wait at the bus stop in morning fog to ride the bus through maze of crowded streets then sit all day in the small cubicle where I organize facts into reports so I can earn money to pay my bills. I work all day for stranger in the tower to earn enough money in my account so I can eat and sleep safe in my bed instead of starving in the alleyway because my hands are gears that operate complex global food-production machine. My ancestors have, for two million years, hunted wild animals and gathered herbs then herded tame animals and farmed crops through endless cycles of eating and sleeping while they generate clones of deathless genes so I feel them all alive in my brain. Though I have, for four hundred million years, been evolving ever more complex forms, fish to lizard to mouse to cat to chimp to wingless angel, who can talk and think, composing world view from facts I perceive, I wonder why I strive to become God. The supernatural deity of God is designed as concept of ideal Man by wild imagination of my brain that projects image of the human being at mindless mirror of the universe so I conceive God I strive to become. Instead of getting on the bus today I walk down signless road of destiny to strum guitar that Mercury designed and sing weird anguish of my aching heart while striving toward the distant mountain top till I get lost in endless maze of myths. Though I never grow those wings of desire to fly beyond bounds of our spinning Earth I walk with two legs sea to shining sea and sing weird story of my search for truth in epic poem about philosophers so I can die with joy since I have lived.
Surazeus Astarius Συράζευς Αστάριος. Cartographer. Epic Poet. Hermead epic poem about Philosophers 126,680 lines of blank verse. http://tinyurl.com/AstarianScriptures
Tuesday, December 20, 2022
I Can Die With Joy
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