How Beautiful Humans Are © Surazeus 2024 09 20 We almost never see the face of death rise moonly pale from sea of swirling souls, yet we stroll blithely down the road of life as if forever knows our secret name, till flowers blossom from my startled brain, wakened by kisses of the lovely rain. When I learn how beautiful humans are because we play in enigmatic woods, I order choas of aggressive plants in golden garden of my brilliant hopes so we flow sweetly in our cryptic homes to share apple cider with nameless ghosts. I feel the best time to be curious about strange beauty of the natural world is when my camera opens eagle wings and flies into dim shadow of my fear to expose why nobody really cares about insanity of saintliness. With tidy answers of unravelings I translate horrible song of the sea to sacred hymns blind angels love to sing in praise of sanctimonious suffering which resurrects my body from the word tightly binding unread books in the sky. Born in the secret cage of holy words, with precious guitar I make from moonlight, I walk invisibly through city crowds to steal memories dripping from their eyes so I can paint road signs with angel blood that show the way forward in maze of myths. Good at pretending I am kind and wise, I bleed my tragic tale through telephones about the night our bus tickets get lost till I wander the wretched world of masks with plan to unbury fake god of light who judges me for what I never say. We always fall off walls of paradise when angels swoop down from indifferent clouds to give us keys that open tower doors where we go to hide from hunger of hope as if we are not special and unique because we sell our souls to empty books. No one pays attention to the old man who gibbers madly by the city gate while saints contend for who will rule the world in brutal battle on the dusty plain where children play soccer with skulls of gods whose noble faces are reclaimed by Death.
Surazeus Astarius Συράζευς Αστάριος. Cartographer. Epic Poet. Hermead epic poem about Philosophers 126,680 lines of blank verse. http://tinyurl.com/AstarianScriptures
Orpheus tries to explain how beautiful humans are but all they hear is the howling of the star wolf at midnight.
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