War Freedom-Lovers Won © Surazeus 2024 01 05 I turn toward the siren singing again as I dance with the crook the shepherd lost in ruins of the high castle where rain calculates the countless lives that were lost when my fathers sailed here in search of gain, and wrestle with Gabriel in the frost. My father rises from wreck of his ship to name the land he claims with smoking gun then gives to me his slave-subduing whip, but I turn against owning anyone and journey west on mind-expanding trip after bloody war freedom-lovers won. Strange treasures in America I found are not the spoils that wealthy people crave, like gold or jewels pilfered from the ground, but family memories only moms would save as sacred tales in precious volumes bound by whisper of the wind on ocean wave. Ghosts of the natives, my ancestors killed while escaping tyrants who stole their land, haunt me with nameless spirits by hope chilled at screech of trains built by the greedy hand after I join the cartography guild so I can trace their footsteps in the sand. I wish that I could raise them from the dead just like the preacher declares Jesus can, but I can only honor them with bread and implement intention of new plan with equal justice for each soul instead, since we were tricked by the confidence man. We cannot civilize the world with graves erased by homes where children pray to God with thanks for labor of the factory slaves who run away to join the justice squad, till Christian soldiers armed with victory staves fight to maintain the national facade. The stars and stripes on Flag of Liberty, that waves above the White House in sea breeze, should promise advancement from poverty for honest hands that tend strong apple trees through chess-game ownership of property in city mazes thick with worker bees. Bound tight to mast of my Odyssean boat with bonds of duty for state citizen, I exercise my sacred right to vote that confirms my soul through self-discipline, entranced by siren of the royal goat, because history repeats itself again.
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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