Fortune Does Not Apply © Surazeus 2025 10 14 To prove fortune does not apply to me I break keys off the typewriter with pliers and scatter them as seeds in dusty soil where they spring into novelists with pens who cut their wrists and bleed words into books about sad women who carry white roses. Stuck in the black house on the busy road, bound in place by red shadows of the night, I enter lives of strangers as they pass to hear their sorrows faint as withered leaves that float near fractured surface of the mirror, wrapped in form of suffering we endure. Though my body was wounded long ago I refuse to revenge myself with hate because I live instead without concern for whether anyone loves me or not since I can distinguish desire from need, creating houses based on bitterness. Eccentric torment of forgotten hope molds twisted forms of angry human souls who imitate tall writhing trees of fear, yet smell sweet scent of rosemary and thyme that bloom in window boxes after rain though we compete against our better selves. Flowers on hills glitter with morning dew while people driving cars crash into rage that shatters civic pride in stolen wealth each time the sun reveals beauty of death concealed by lies on television shows till snow shrouds everything in absent faith. Buoyant by nature of attentive love, we travel to museums filled with masks that gods once wore on pyramids of power where children now write their true secret names with curving letters of blood on flat stones which substitutes the image for the face. I see the world around me with glass eyes which I forge from childhood anxieties concealed in memories of the silver sky that weigh my brain with moments of regret more bright that stars that gleam on fretful lakes till I can see the world as it is now. I watch strange lights of Heaven bleed new words so I know nothing by my steady breath when I exchange contempt for tense respect as rain streams along landscape of my body where grief and happiness share clever tales which proves fortune does not apply to me.
Surazeus Astarius Συράζευς Αστάριος. Cartographer. Epic Poet. Hermead epic poem about Philosophers 126,680 lines of blank verse. http://tinyurl.com/AstarianScriptures
Orpheus argues with Hamlet that fortune only applies to those tormented by guilt for hurting people through arrogance of selfish greed.
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