French revolutionaries guillotined God at Cluny, but He exacted His tithe all the same: one-tenth of their bad ideas tossed back at them. The tyranny of terror, cheap dream of heaven, in ruins.
A vast emptiness swamps the nave; stumps of pillars stained black and gray and black again by age and rain and blood. Only one tower stands intact. I scan the burnished hills behind it; they do not look back.
“The birth throes of liberty,” cried Thomas Jefferson. “Rejoice!” Despots toppled; authority crippled for a future that never comes. Terror and waste; waste and terror. The desolation of faith.
On the tiny town square, a high-tech bistro beams. Lights surge behind the bar, sending out distress signals of the mind: the throb of synapses firing wildly in the wind. Material infinity.
Old men saunter in to down a beer, and harness their dogs under tables. Parents and students slurp pricey shots of caffeine. Emancipated energy. Above the din, they cannot hear the Earth’s foundation crack.
Freedom leaves a sacred void in its wake, watered by the blood of worldly martyrs. On the menu: égalité, fraternité, fissure and ruin. Thunder in the hills. Words crash around us like cannonballs.
Liberté lingers outside in the municipal lot. A van propped up on wooden blocks for the night. No hassles, man. Free parking. Let’*******another beer to Robespierre. His dog strains at its leash.