Choosing Our Own Fate © Surazeus 2025 05 21 I try to focus on the little things adjusted carefully in each glass case in the Great American Museum of Domestic Tranquility to showcase my privileged place in story of our state defined by the random choices of fate. While eating orange I stole from Tree of Life, I lounge in park among wind-rustled leaves beneath tall statue of William the Silent to honor independence of the mind from all controlling tyrants of the state who dare think they can legislate our fate. I mean to tell about my life at home with solemn voice of the brave mocking bird, but my heart sprouts wings and will tend to roam across the ancient landscape of the Earth where people fight to establish the state so they can pretend they control their fate. The fact that I am related to both General Robert Edward Lee and John Brown defines ambiguous nature of being programming cultural code of my mind which operates how I function in my state though I swim against empire tides of fate. If I analyze my relationships with my family through quaint fairy tales I might present in well-masked characters ancient forces of social theater which form foundation of our global state while I perform roles that defy my fate. Or I could satirize with timeless gods contemporary leaders of vast nations who wrestle that angel whom Israel fought to balance freedom of the individual with public interest of the faceless state by enforcing laws that equalize fate. Though I attempt to fictionalize my life in tradition of college writers workshops, instead I sing about global events in tradition of wandering troubadours to record chronicles of the world state which moralize weird principles of fate. This face-mask from the ancient gallery, I wear while chanting arcane prophecies, reflects the psychic mind of Everyman through mirror of the television screen to rationalize blind functions of the state that we enforce by choosing our own fate.
Surazeus Astarius Συράζευς Αστάριος. Cartographer. Epic Poet. Hermead epic poem about Philosophers 126,680 lines of blank verse. http://tinyurl.com/AstarianScriptures
Translate
Wednesday, May 21, 2025
Choosing Our Own Fate
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Orpheus shares his latest poem with the writers workshop in which he attempts to mimic the domestic poetics of contemporary academic style, but fails spectacularly.
ReplyDelete