Headless Idol Of Helios © Surazeus 2025 10 23 I hide regret for how I lose my brain when it detaches and floats among clouds with haughty disdain of the red balloon that drifts down to the hidden Cyclades to visit strange land where Poseidon rules through azure waters of unyielding hope. Since I am admired son of Helios, removed from political games of power long fought between contending gangs of thieves, I never meddle in daily affairs when money clerks shout in grand temple halls for whose social program defines the state. Though I have no idea what to do with bag of wind Aeolus sold to me to send our merchant ships across the sea, I give my precious pearls of solitude to every goddess I meet on the beach where they dance with abandon of the lost. From Babylon to Phoenicia to Rome I build great empire with the golden sword that Justice wields according to my whim to track where rebellious Icarus flies in revolution of the working class against divine kings in castles of glass. Shocked by the ardent gaze of holy fools, who replace my will with communal rules, I coil aggressive sorrow of my heart with lithe serpentine grace of honest greed around the Tree of Knowledge to proclaim that I will sell my kingdom for your horse. Entangled by confusing states of mind between empire and local farming rights, I gather trash of lies strewn along roads while reciting riddles of social codes designed by Homer to explain why gods deign to play with proud humans in chess games. Stuck somewhere deep in maze of national myths about superior wisdom of my race, I study headless idol of Helios that toppled from its lofty pedestal when silver airplanes of angels dropped bombs in world war that shattered Kingdom of God. Wandering with my Muse in pine-thick hills around holy Mount Takoma white with snow, I find the long-lost lyre of Mercury so I walk east along ancestral roads from Oregon to Avalon to Rome and sing about the Fall of Icarus.
Surazeus Astarius Συράζευς Αστάριος. Cartographer. Epic Poet. Hermead epic poem about Philosophers 126,680 lines of blank verse. http://tinyurl.com/AstarianScriptures
Orpheus lectures about the Fall of Icarus in the world war that shattered the Kingdom of God to students at the University of Zarathia.
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