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Oh great Ophiuchus, you stand there mighty above us, all nights, collapsed in the collapsible container sky. We do look up to you, Ophiuchus, as other-worldly worries nestle us into our nested doll worlds. Though Ophiuchus, we must ask again, what it is you can give us while your sculpted arms keep a coiling beast at bay? Go on, let go. Let go of it, Ophiuchus. Your strong hands can point us back, just when our need walks forward, to a stone-laid patio where broad browns empty into vast blues, and our wise Hypatia sits nose in books. Woe it is, Ophiuchus, she’s so oblivious, to those shouts of a smallish mob, their small minds squeezed by greedy Christian lands. They pad to her on paws well-provided with ostraca claws, and next morning the mourner jackdaw will refuse to withdraw its usual caw from a flawed maw that couldn’t warn her, the time’s off. It’s now it seems, Ophiuchus, the day’s come, though the daw’s left us, when clay heads will fall at golden feet. But Ophiuchus, do please tell us, can we focus? After these many centuries, Ophiuchus, can we learn to focus, and on our own keep the constant nips of the present-preened serpents at bay?
0
Mar 16, 2011
Mar 16, 2011 at 11:32 AM UTC
Oh, Ophiuchus
Oh great Ophiuchus, you stand there mighty above us, all nights, collapsed in the collapsible container sky. We do look up to you, Ophiuchus, as other-worldly worries nestle us into our nested doll worlds. Though Ophiuchus, we must ask again, what it is you can give us while your sculpted arms keep a coiling beast at bay? Go on, let go. Let go of it, Ophiuchus. Your strong hands can point us back, just when our need walks forward, to a stone-laid patio where broad browns empty into vast blues, and our wise Hypatia sits nose in books. Woe it is, Ophiuchus, she’s so oblivious, to those shouts of a smallish mob, their small minds squeezed by greedy Christian lands. They pad to her on paws well-provided with ostraca claws, and next morning the mourner jackdaw will refuse to withdraw its usual caw from a flawed maw that couldn’t warn her, the time’s off. It’s now it seems, Ophiuchus, the day’s come, though the daw’s left us, when clay heads will fall at golden feet. But Ophiuchus, do please tell us, can we focus? After these many centuries, Ophiuchus, can we learn to focus, and on our own keep the constant nips of the present-preened serpents at bay?
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
francis-scudellari
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Mar 16, 2011
Mar 16, 2011 at 11:32 AM UTC
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