Retrospective, At the End
by
Sand Pilarski
I think about us, alone, at the end of the world;
our lives peeled back,
the very fabric of reality unfurled.
Or if we were stranded, on an island, you and I;
long waves breaking,
palm trees swaying in the breeze against an azure sky.
What if we were the last two explorers at the Pole,
our fuel all gone --
and just our heat to keep alive body and soul?
I would take my chance with the penguins or polar bears,
trudge out the door,
teeth gritted, on snowshoes, loudly mumbling, "Who cares?"
With strung-together coconuts I'd set out to sea,
in my bare skin,
afraid of death by jellyfish or shark -- not me.
Apocalypse dissolves the universe. Out you go,
into the void,
my swift kick making sure that you reap what you sow.
You're such a jerk. To you, my value was less than dirt.
Your greatest crime?
Never noticing that your inattention hurt.
This is the best poem I’ve read in years.
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