Safe Home I Build © Surazeus 2024 06 11 When Hector, fleet-footed hero of Troy, had the choice to hide behind high stone walls to protect his family and tribe from harm, he chose instead to fight bully of Greece and die with personal glory of pride, earning fame of triumph at hour of death. When Aeneas wore his armor and helmet, grasping sharp sword to fight invading horde, he chose instead to save his family by guiding them away from burning towers to sail across the Neptune-storming sea and build new home on lush Tiberian hills. When Turnus, bold-hearted hero of Latium, found out Lavinia, his childhood sweetheart, was promised as bride to the pirate thief, he chose to fight the invaders from Troy and die with personal glory of pride, earning fame of triumph at hour of death. Though Adam fled stone walls of Paradise when Eloh drove him out with flaming sword, instigated by Lilith, his new queen, he chose to explore the lush river shore and build new garden in the wilderness far outside empire where his father ruled. I feel ambitious spirit in my heart, programmed in my genes by victorious quests of my ancestors to crown themselves kings, urge me to campaign with justice for truth in bid to control functions of the state, yet I choose to stay home and draw world map. Instead of organizing noble gangs of brave warriors to oppose tyranny by killing bullies, enslavers, and thieves, to crown myself arbiter of good laws that manage empire of commercial peace, I choose to chronicle events of fate. Aeneas chose to build empire of law that maintains organized society where public citizens who create goods earn right to share communal wealth of love for glory of the nation they protect instead of personal glory at death. Alone on highway under silver clouds deep in the rocky Rainbow Mountain range, I travel east to find lost Roman home on the same road my fathers traveled west, because there is no Promised Land on Earth other than safe home I build for my family.
Surazeus Astarius Συράζευς Αστάριος. Cartographer. Epic Poet. Hermead epic poem about Philosophers 126,680 lines of blank verse. http://tinyurl.com/AstarianScriptures
Orpheus in the college classroom lectures about the different heroic values in Greek epic versus Roman epic.
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