Franklin Gillette


The Course of Empire


Based on the paintings of Thomas Cole in the New York Historical Society


 


I. SAVAGE STATE


 


The metropolis builds giant oaks


hovering over commuting streams of ants.


Owls, hawks and eagles glide like planes


delivering express cargo of field mice


and besieged rabbits to penthouse holes.


 


No maps exist except for inborn instincts.


There are no suburbs, city or county lines,


yet property rights are closely marked by scent.


Rain and wind—the only tax collectors


balance as does the census never taken.


 


II. PASTORAL STATE


 


Clothing ourselves we forget ourselves —


our shapes confuse in bags of drapery.


Even campfire smoke has docile harmony.


The clouds have settled.  The Shepard with his stick


walks flocks back plushy planted lawns.


 


All spring and fall they labor on the farm


hoping weather will not wreak their work.


Eden, where, they didn’t have to work,


is lost, its fruit of knowledge only taught


them to think their own nakedness.


 


III. CONSUMMATION OF EMPIRE


 


Here art replaces nature, policy


replaces instinct or intuition,


marble pillars replace trunks of trees,


rocks are cut to roads replacing fields,


and human beings become domesticated slaves.


 


On other species one species imposes,


and a small circle dominates that species


while rulers worship statues of the gods


or on silk, reclining in their palaces,


bored from building, pass time counting coins.


 


IV. DESTRUCTION


 


Pushed by hunger, ambition and revenge


invaders eye a populous draped in silk,


seeking weakness they find decadence,


cowardly leaders, whimsical gaggling mobs


only vigilant on topics tickling the brain.


 


The beautiful city waits too long… bewildered


the headless marble hero charges his sword…


escape boats burn… sink…. bridges collapse;


witnesses of the attack alert the outskirts


which chuckle: “how could our empire fall?”


 


V. DESOLATION


 


They die.  Only the shattered pieces remain


to sink into the earth.  Thousands of years


go by.  A farmer’s or sheepherder’s child


with his friend, or amateur explorers,


or drillers find a broken piece of bronze.


 


Archeologists flying to the site


dig deeper finding the pattern of the streets


which we follow on the TV News,


the ancient capitol once thought a myth


ships to museums in our current empire.


______________________________________________________________


Franklin Gillette won the Starr Symposium Poetry Contest and his work has appeared in Poetry East, Light Quarterly and many other magazines. He is also an opera librettist, a painter and a spiritual teacher.

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Published on October 02, 2017 17:11
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