Not Since a Century Past
Not since a century long past
Has the Moon dethroned the Sun
From the two oceans so vast
That embrace the bald eagle’s son.
Not since a hundred years ago
Has the crown of fire been taken
By the mover of the tides that ebb and flow
By the pale, two-faced, ghastly maiden.
Not since the bloody apex of the First War
Have the cattle and owls been driven mad
By the mirage of Night from field to shore,
While countrymen stare upwards darkness-clad.
Not since the zeitgeist of patriotic wartime
Has the syzygy caused the world to tremble,
As priests warn of the wrath of gods sublime
And the wild eagle’s adversaries assemble.
Not since the age Man took to the clouds
Has totality cast the land of the beavers,
And the land where the palmettos form nervous crowds,
In the darkness they fear as eager sun-believers.
Not since the whole world was in ominous discord
Have the native elders prophesied a transformation,
While tribesmen from all Four Corners pay respects to their lord,
Who dies and is reborn in a ritual of sacred purification.
Not until seven, then twenty-eight years after today,
Will Selene twice more ambush Helios’s chariot afire,
And will the dark snake devour the gleaming egg laid by Day,
Before being frightened by Man’s screams and drums of ire.