Stark Finality Of Death © Surazeus 2023 07 09 Outraged by stark finality of death, that our divine consciousness of the Self will vanish when our bodies dissipate, spurs Hamlet to assert creative will since he must reinvent himself to live with glorious arrogance of vital faith. Heart broken at harsh tale of unjust death his gentle mother suffered at his birth when his father, doubting her faithfulness, burned her to death, Dionysus drinks wine and dances wild with inspiration of breath to translate crippling despair into joy. Desperate to bring his lover back to life, in vain attempt to resurrect her soul, Orpheus descends into cave of dreams where vain illusions flicker on the wall, and sings to guide his Muse to world of light, but her body rots and crumbles to dust. Enraged that beautiful girl he kidnapped was taken from him by the gangster king, Achilles howls with manic lust for pride and hacks the noble Hector with sharp sword, then drags corpse of the faithful husband prince with mocking disdain for heroic deeds. Inspired by vision of society where the good-hearted king with honest hope protects his people from cruel parasites, Odysseus escapes witch queen of the pigs, and shoots straight arrow through the legal loops proving his right to reign and exploit the poor. Anointed by grim Storm God on the Mountain to mediate between Law of the Sky and frail humanity of dust composed, Jesus wrestles angel of arrogance in campaign to run as World President willing to die to save souls of his people. Lusting to impregnate thousands of women that he may populate Earth with his seed, Zeus sits on gold throne in Temple of Truth to play chess with haughty daughter of Death who laughs at vanity of his male pride while all his sons are slaughtered in world wars. Accepting stark finality of death as natural process of chemical forms evolving into conscious beings with brains who feel their souls radiate from the God Eye, Apollo sits in temple of dead gods and chants epic tale of philosophers.
Surazeus Astarius Συράζευς Αστάριος. Cartographer. Epic Poet. Hermead epic poem about Philosophers 126,680 lines of blank verse. http://tinyurl.com/AstarianScriptures
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