New Jorvik Magazine © Surazeus 2026 01 11 After the morning scrolls itself awake in ponderous words of rain on blue glass, eyeless sparrow on windowsill of fate rehearses arrogant remorse by noon encoded in engine rumble of cars that float in circles of white butterflies. If I drink coffee that tastes of elsewhere, in cup chipped by worry of ignored facts, I might hear cheerful whistle of the neighbor who waters delicate plants in clean pots that have already decided to glow with unread stories of the morning news. Developing news on the flashing screen reveal secret desires of human hearts which means the faceless ghosts of anywhere have not yet heard their names hidden in drops of rain that glitter on the window pane so tables understand how to stand straight. I scroll past strange argument about God that I once designed from logical terms still typing itself in mouth of the horse who always brings the tree nymph to my house so we drink tea brewed from angelic tears and read poems in New Jorvik Magazine. Sad siren on stone of Odysseus braids air with urgency of hungry gods, but drops unfinished book of fairy tales unread into the swirling tides of change that we must deal with in the city streets where emergencies reach for the last peach. My phone forgets whom I need to call now, so I eat lunch alone in crowded church with private anguish of the humble sign that flashes when my camera clears its throat, alert to ad that promises respect stuck in three payments of simplicity. Clouds rehearse impersonations of gods which dwell in mountains, animals, and trees, except apology no one accepts for mistake I made on the roadless sign when the dead king briefly consults my firm for how to understand words of the rain. My eyeless sparrow on the windowsill develops theory about broken brains that should explain how mirrors steal our souls each time we write emails to companies for refunds from the American Dream which linger unsent in the unsaved night.
Surazeus Astarius Συράζευς Αστάριος. Cartographer. Epic Poet. Hermead epic poem about Philosophers 126,680 lines of blank verse. http://tinyurl.com/AstarianScriptures
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Sunday, January 11, 2026
New Jorvik Magazine
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Orpheus relaxes on balcony of his apartment that overlooks Central Park and reads his latest poem published in the New Yorker Magazine while eating a chocolate croissant and sipping a ginger mocha.
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