Under the jejeune moon’s wide-eyed stare, idol me not but love, past the sell-by date monogamously magnanimous revolutionizing best-selling hedonism for a kiss that goes on for a lifetime, valentine.
The Mountain under the marble Moon speaks to that blind assassin whose cold shards impinge upon a brave rider’s heart, and asks:
“Why dost thou not strike a flame from off thy flinty eyes and lend a light to this lost child that wends through thickets of devils to reach the gardens of her gods?”
“Fool!” cries the Moon in pale fury, “the devils are her gods and hence, my stony countenance notwithstanding, I refrain from giving aid to those who seek her bitter demise.”
The rider unaware of all but her own desire, puzzled o’er the Moon’s cold stare and the Mountain heaving ‘neath her horse’s feet as if to urge her retreat, yet rides on breathing, “Brotherhood for all!”
Now she hears a melody bewitching strong as near a tomb o’erlaid with dew she spies a stranger with a grinning mask of Pharaoh’s gold singing, “Brotherhood for all,” and she hastily stops short.
Unease strikes her restless heart, she wipes her fevered brow glad for once of the Moon’s restraining sight, the Mountain’s sudden shadowed dips, and decries the siren’s call that had led her thus on such false hope.
For that golden mask she knew had enslaved far more than greed or fame, and hid a braggart’s deceiving face to lead to doom all those who brotherhood seek yet flinch to own the One who came as brother to die upon a cross.
The Moon shone brightly now she turned, still breathing, “Brotherhood to all,” and a Mountain toad among sweet violets croaked when dawn came glistening o’er the dew as the Sun, once dark to see its Maker’s pain, now sang a song of life.
“Only the dead have seen the end of war.” — Plato “They have left the straight way and wandered off to follow the way of Balaam son of Bezer, who loved the wages of wickedness.” — 2 Peter 2:15 (NIV)
You set me a riddle of romance, Kindly Moon, a beguiling trap by the waters of Babylon where Cartier trinkets line red-bowed caskets made in China riding on Charon’s ferry
by the waters of Babylon where I hung up my Guccis like spangled semaphores testifying to the Sinai fire on a holy mountain while sipping Florentine wine in D.C.
You sent me a Utopian dream of Jerusalem under kindly eyes before my breakdown, where I dwelt perennial in the tongues of state -craft, sightless as a stone gargoyle with carbonized
hate, when home after home, city after city I visited, inflaming tribal sigils, leavening in unguarded hearts dystopias in abandoned strollers, palaces of discontent, malodorous diffusion, contentious, disfiguring.
So now I frame you, with Pyrrhic ruins, dead-to-rights from my watery bier with the very crimes you silver-framed me in Chicago (Kabul or Kiev) where all roads meet with a gunshot and a cry.
*The October full moon is known in China as the Kindly Moon.