The vast surroundings
breathe
beautiful, soft, gasping breaths
the air settling gently
into the black atmosphere,
low clouds rolling, early in pregnancy
with a rattling storm
the wind picking up,
the taste of the air changing,
guttural howls in the distance,
nature’s song — or swansong -
engaging and chilling
simultaneously.
-
All of history has guided us here,
all of the endless
love and violence,
every breath taken
by any who ever lived
has been gathered or utilised
to create
what we breathe now.
-
The bodies
pile high,
the ground is filled with corpses
like landmines,
blood slick upon
the streets like
fine rain,
monuments are not enough for them,
and the infinite sky
is disrupted by brick and wire
and the hope of have nots
is skilfully choked by those
who have.
-
It is easy to give up, it is easy
to surrender,
it is easy to kneel down and
place your limp wrists upon the Earth
facing up to the sky and begging
for a mercy
afforded to so few.
-
Nature sings its song,
and you are one of a billion instruments
swaying in delicacy
the sun sees you and burns brighter,
its embers
alive
breathing, too,
and dancing.
-
The nausea you feel
is bitter and large,
but so small
and forgotten
in the face of winding seas of grass,
-
step away from the concrete
and listen to the Earth’s breathing
-
remove the wires plugged into
your skin,
-
and hear the wolves
howl into the setting sun,
-
the beginning of all sound,
imagine the beginning,
the silence
and imagine the now,
burning and bleeding
-
and find yourself
detached and alive
a singular being
not attached to anything,
truly free,
a toy to yourself
in unison
with beauty’s very
definition.
About the Creator
Reece Beckett
Poetry and cultural discussion (primarily regarding film!).
Author of Portrait of a City on Fire (2020, Impspired Press). Also on Medium and Substack, with writing featured… around…


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