October 20, 2025

A Rethinking Of Hesiod's And Homer's.(ep)


The Iliad is one of two major ancient Greek epic poems attributed to Homer. It is one of the oldest extant works of literature still widely read by modern age.
This work below is an attempt to replicate the incredible feat Of Hesiod and Homer in a thousand paged whirlwind hello Of below book .Quite impossible task i must due to copyright issue.So alternatively a brief, modern reimagining in the spirit of the ambution was born
So in a full manuscript,Of Which some are published below we incorporate patterns from  both Homer's and Hesiod's styles, weaving together the divine drama of Hesiod's Theogony with the heroic narrative of the Trojan War and Odysseus's to produce wonderful books below:

Book I: The Spark of Discord
(Direction: The narrative opens not on the beaches of Troy, but in a celestial palace, echoing Hesiod's account of the gods. It is told with elevated, poetic language.)
Sing to me, O Muse, not of wrath, but of the weight of words. Not of man's fate alone, but of the celestial decree that casts the die for mortal souls.
In the high hall of Olympus, where ambrosia stains the marble floors and laughter rings like hammered bronze, the gods gathered. Not in harmony, but in a simmering discord, a tension that began not with men, but with a gilded apple.
It was Eris, Discord herself, with skin like milk and malice in her heart, who cast the fruit. "For the fairest," the inscription read, and the sacred feast dissolved into a squabble of goddesses. Hera, majestic and proud, offered Paris dominion over all lands. Athena, wise and terrible in her war-helm, promised victory and wisdom. But it was Aphrodite, with a voice like honeyed whispers and a gaze that promised forbidden joy, who offered the most dangerous prize: the love of Helen, the most beautiful woman on earth.
From the sun-soaked palace of Menelaus, Paris seized the promised prize. He sailed across the wine-dark sea, leaving behind a cuckolded king and a continent plunged into shadow. He did not foresee the consequences, that a single act of passion would summon a thousand ships and unleash a decade of bloodshed. He did not hear the Fates, weaving their threads of vengeance and destiny, as one god after another chose a side in the war to come.
So it began, not with the clash of armor, but with the clinking of a goblet and a whisper of lust. For though the war would be fought on the dusty plains of Troy, the true battle was already underway, in the sacred, and deeply flawed, hearts of the gods.
Book II: The Long Road Home
(Direction: The narrative shifts from the high poetry of the gods to a more human, gritty perspective, following Odysseus on his struggle. The tone should be world-weary and realistic.)
He was a man of many turns, but he was tired of turning. Ten years of war, ten years of slaughter, and now ten more years of wandering. His ships were broken, his men lost to the siren's song and the Cyclops's maw. All that remained was the salt spray on his beard and the ache of longing for his rocky island home.
"Sail on," the men would cry, their voices hoarse with desperation, but he had lost his way. The gods, who once played with his destiny like a child with clay, now seemed to have forgotten him entirely. The goddesses who once vied for Paris's favor now toyed with his very existence.
He stood on the deck of his final ship, a splintered relic of a larger fleet, and stared at the star-filled night. He had faced monsters and endured enchantresses, and yet the true monster was the doubt that gnawed at his gut. Was Ithaca still there? Was Penelope still waiting? Or had the world moved on without the forgotten king?
He recalled the words of the blind prophet in the underworld, of the long road and the trials to come. But in his heart, there was no longer a thirst for glory, only for rest. The hero's journey, so noble in song, was a curse in reality, a never-ending cycle of pain.
So he sailed, not for fame, but for the simple hope of a harbor and a hearth fire. For he was no longer the great Odysseus, the tactician and the trickster. He was just a man, desperate to go home, pursued by the indifferent whims of the heavens and the ghosts of his own past. He longed for the simple life Hesiod had sung of, the dignity of honest labor, but his past would not release him. His home, a mythical prize that seemed forever just beyond the horizon.

(Direction: This chapter moves to a more direct, human narrative, focusing on Odysseus's inner state as he navigates a supernatural landscape. The tone is more immediate and sensory, contrasting with the epic sweep of the previous chapters.)

He tasted the sea, not with his tongue, but with the grit of salt in his teeth, a permanent companion. It was the taste of exile, of promises broken by storms and gods. On the island of the goddess-enchantress, Circe, he had found a brief respite. But even in her bed, surrounded by the turned-to-swine memories of his men, he could not rest. Her hospitality was a gilded cage, and the song of her loom a silken thread of forgetfulness.
But the memories were a sharper needle, and the call of Ithaca a siren song more powerful than any she could weave. One morning, he rose, the smell of roasted meat still in the air, and announced his departure. Circe, seeing the hunger in his eyes was not for food, but for a home she could not provide, only sighed. She was a goddess; she understood the fleeting nature of mortal loyalty.
"You will not see your wife until you have seen the shades," she told him, her voice low and resonant, like the hum of a distant loom. She spoke of the Underworld, of the prophet Tiresias, and of the long road that could only be shortened by a journey into the dark.
So he sailed again, into a world not of monsters, but of echoes. He went to the land of the Cimmerians, where the sun never shone and the air was thick with the despair of the dead. He poured libations, not of wine or water, but of the blood of a sacrificed ram, and the dead rose like smoke, pale and hungry for life.
He saw the ghost of his mother, Anticlea, a shock to his heart. He had not known she was dead. She had died of a broken heart, she told him, of a grief that came not from war, but from the long years of his absence. The knowledge was a new weight, heavier than any spear he had ever carried. He reached for her, his hands passing through the ethereal form of the one who gave him life. He was a hero in a world of mortals, and a ghost in the world of the dead, caught between two states of being.
He spoke with the fallen heroes of Troy—with Achilles, who had traded a long, quiet life for a brief, glorious one. "Better to be a peasant on earth," Achilles said, his voice a whisper of rustling leaves, "than a king among the dead." The words were a stark reminder of the cost of glory, of the hollow prize he had fought for, a prize that felt like ashes in his mouth.
He came back from the underworld changed. He no longer sought fame. He only sought the mundane, the quiet, the simple life he had so carelessly abandoned. He was no longer the great Odysseus, the tactician. He was just a man with a heavy past, sailing on a sea that remembered his hubris and had no intention of letting him forget.
(Direction: The final chapter concludes the reimagined story, tying together the epic scope of the divine and the personal journey of the mortal. The tone shifts again, offering a sense of closure and the quiet dignity of a hero's return.)

Book III: The Long Day Ends
The suitor's hall was a den of gluttony, its marble floors stained with spilled wine and the echoes of their careless laughter. They had feasted for years on Odysseus's wealth, confident that their host was a ghost lost to the sea. But a shadow stood in the corner, disguised as a beggar, watching and waiting. He was an old man, and his kingdom, his palace, and his wife felt like a distant dream.
Penelope, the faithful one, with her web of cunning and her heart of stone, had held them at bay. But even her resolve was beginning to fray. She stood before them, a loom and a promise in her hands. She would marry the man who could string Odysseus's great bow. The task was impossible, a final gambit to hold onto a hope that was nearly extinguished.
The suitors failed, one by one, their boasts turning into shame as the great bow remained unstrung. Then, the beggar stepped forward. The hall erupted in laughter, their jeers and mockery filling the air. But as the old man took the bow, a hush fell over the room. The god of the sky, Zeus, sent a sign—a crack of thunder—and the hall fell silent.
With a motion that was both practiced and ancient, the beggar strung the bow. The sound was like a cricket's cry, thin and resonant, a whisper of a life that had been put on hold for twenty years. He then nocked an arrow, aimed it at the door, and with a voice that was both a king's and a ghost's, he spoke: "Your feast is over."
The blood flowed like wine on the polished floors. The battle was not a glorious epic, but a brutal, desperate slaughter. The beggar revealed himself as the king, and with his son, Telemachus, and the loyal swineherd, he purged his palace of its parasitic guests. The laughter died, and the silence that followed was heavy with the weight of lost time.
When the slaughter was done, he bathed and put on the robes of a king. He stood before Penelope, and for a moment, they were strangers. The years had changed them both, turning the young couple into weathered figures of myth. But then he spoke, and in his voice, she heard the man she loved, the clever man who had built their bed from the living wood of an olive tree. The detail was a secret only they knew. The last remaining doubt in her heart was finally put to rest.
So the long day ended, not in glory, but in a weary peace. The gods had been placated, the debts of war repaid in blood, and the king was finally home. Odysseus did not return as the hero he had been, but as a man who had seen the limits of ambition. He had lived the epics sung by Hesiod and Homer, and he had learned their central truth: that the life of a hero is not measured in fame, but in the quiet, unyielding love for the home he returns to. His journey was not a tale of greatness, but a lesson in humility, a reminder that even the greatest among us are ultimately just mortals, hungry for rest.


(Direction: The narrative continues with a quiet epilogue, focusing on the aftermath of the violence and the slow, difficult process of rebuilding. The tone becomes more meditative, reflecting on the nature of peace after prolonged conflict. It also incorporates elements from the later traditions of Odysseus's life.)

The blood was scrubbed from the marble, the hall swept clean of the bones of the careless. But a memory, a stain darker than any gore, lingered in the air. For a time, Ithaca fell silent. The palace, once filled with the drunken clamor of the suitors, was now a tomb. The air thrummed with a heavy, watchful quiet.
Odysseus, no longer a beggar and not yet a king again, found himself a stranger in his own home. He had fought monsters and men, but he was unprepared for the delicate, mundane dance of peace. He found rest in Penelope's arms, the bed built from the sacred olive tree a familiar shore after a lifetime of storms. They spoke, but not of the war. They spoke of the small things, the turn of the seasons, the growth of their son, the years that had passed like unspooled thread. For years, the story of his wanderings had been his shield; now it was a burden, a heavy cloak he wished to shed.
Telemachus, his son, was a man now, a king in all but name. He had shed his youthful passivity in the battle with the suitors, and a hard confidence had settled in his features. He ruled with a quiet strength, a stark contrast to his father's cunning. Odysseus watched him, not with envy, but with a deep, weary pride. The old hero had passed his legacy not of glory, but of responsibility.
The gods, too, had fallen silent. Poseidon, his wrath sated by a decade of torment, had turned his eye elsewhere. Athena, her champion home at last, offered no more guidance. Her work was done. But the prophet's words from the Underworld still echoed in Odysseus's ears: his final journey was yet to come. He was to walk inland with an oar on his shoulder, until he met a people who did not know the sea. There, he would make his final sacrifice to Poseidon, and find a soft, sweet death.
Years passed. The palace filled with the laughter of a new generation. The scars of the suitors' blood faded from the marble. Odysseus watched, a ghost in his own house, until one day, the familiar restlessness returned. He had reclaimed his throne, his wife, and his son, but he had not yet found peace.
He took up an old oar and began to walk. He left his kingdom in the capable hands of Telemachus. Penelope, her eyes full of the understanding of twenty years of waiting, said nothing. She knew the sea had a hold on him still, a promise it was not yet ready to break. He walked, and walked, and as the salt taste of the sea faded from the air, replaced by the scent of earth and harvest, a peace settled over him.
He came to a village high in the mountains, a place of shepherds and farmers. He met a man who, seeing the object on his shoulder, mistook it for a winnowing fan. Odysseus knew his journey was over. He built an altar, made his sacrifice to the gods, and finally, truly, came home to the quiet earth.
The epic had ended not in fire and blood, but in a whisper, in the rustle of leaves and the turning of the soil. The hero became a king, the king became an old man, and the old man, in the end, became a story. He was a cautionary tale for the gods, and a legend for men, a testament to the price of glory and the quiet reward of returning home. His son, and his son's sons, would rule. And his name would echo in song, a name not of fame, but of endurance. The wanderer had finally come to rest.



(Direction: The narrative shifts to an account of the gods' perspective, a brief echo of Hesiod's style, reflecting on Odysseus's journey and his ultimate end. It is delivered in a high, mythic register, with a focus on fate and divine perspective.)


In the halls of Olympus, the final journey of the mortal, Odysseus, was watched with a detached curiosity. The war-god, Ares, remembered the Trojan plain, a place of glorious, brutal chaos. He had seen the king of Ithaca fight not with strength, but with a serpentine cunning that he found both admirable and slightly distasteful. It was not the noble, straightforward violence of a hero like Achilles, but a more insidious, clever kind.
Athena, however, smiled. Her champion had completed his odyssey. She had guided him, shielded him, and, at times, tested him. She had watched him descend into the land of the dead and ascend from the sea-foam to reclaim his kingdom. His final pilgrimage, with the oar on his shoulder, was his true masterpiece. It was a journey not of conquest, but of surrender. A hero, for once, choosing the quiet end over the glorious one.
Poseidon, once his bitter enemy, had watched from his deep-sea palace with a grudging respect. The mortal had endured. The sea had not broken him. But the promise of a peaceful death, far from the salt and spray, was his final concession. A god’s rage can only last so long; the patience of a mortal, it seemed, could outlast it.
And Zeus, from his throne, saw it all and simply nodded. The divine game, in which mortals were pawns and playthings, had come to a satisfying end. The great story, the tale of war and wandering, had finally concluded in a manner not of epic tragedy, but of quiet, dignified peace. It was a reminder that even the greatest conflicts, divinely sparked and fueled, ultimately end with the small, mortal choices of men. The world had turned, a new age had dawned, and the gods, in their eternal, unchanging way, were already moving on to the next tale.
(Direction:

Prolegomenon To An Undiluted Obfuscation.(EP)

Take a look here at the blogger's lengthy, complex, and lexically dense 50 stanzas poem that attempts to meet your request by exploring themes of knowledge, meaning, and the human condition, utilizing a rich and expansive vocabulary.


Prolegomenon to an Undiluted Obfuscation
1.
From nebulous noumena, a proemial rime,
a sempiternal glyph, a peripatetic climb,
where epistemes contort in a pleroma's gleam,
and solipsistic visions foment a cosmic dream,
the mind, a hypnagogic phantasmagoria,
unfurling its apocryphal cartographia.
2.
The chthonic cadences of a forgotten lore,
a hermeneutic schism on a meta-mythic shore,
an antediluvian script in the palimpsest of years,
where eschatological murmurings disquiet our fears,
and ontologies commingle in a syncretic brew,
a hecatomb of meaning, forever strange and new.
3.
The susurrus of seraphim in a cerulean vast,
a susurrant cosmogony, designed to not outlast
the ephemera of thought, a synecdoche of grace,
a heterodox cosmology in this liminal space,
where eidetic memories of a noetic past,
are transmogrified and shattered by a cataclasmic blast.
4.
A concatenation of conundrums, a jejune display,
of intellectual hubris in this dialectic fray,
the recondite redactions, a palisade of text,
a hermetic exegesis, profoundly complex,
a paradigm of silence in the glossolalia's din,
the sybaritic secrets that perpetually begin.
5.
The logomachy of sages in a scholastic hall,
a phallocentric logic, designed to make us fall,
a pataphysical pretense, a tautological art,
that sunders the gestalt and cleaves the mind apart,
a concatenation of conclusions from premises unclear,
a sophomoric spectacle, both cynical and dear.
6.
The panoptic spectacle of a post-human mind,
a solipsistic serenade for those who fall behind,
the epiphenomenal echoes in a quantum space,
a pharisaic premonition of a coming new disgrace,
a numinous nexus where the mundane finds its end,
a teleological terminus, a message to transcend.
7.
The eidolon of memory, in an autotelic spin,
where phenomenological phantoms forever creep within,
a psychopompous journey through the labyrinthine maze,
a catachrestic metaphor in these anomic days,
a logodaedalic lexicon, a verbal, viscous spree,
an ineffable expression of all we long to be.
8.
The hierophantic whisperings of a recondite design,
a thaumaturgical tableau, a preterite divine,
a paracausal narrative, a symposiac spree,
a numenclatural necromancy for the blind to see,
a hypostatic union of the sacred and profane,
a heautological history, and forever in the rain.
9.
The procrustean predilections of a paradigmatic shift,
a palatial panorama, a transcendental gift,
a concatenation of coincidences, a serendipitous plea,
a metanoia of the spirit, a truth that sets one free,
a xenoglossic utterance in a xenophobic age,
a xenial exegesis, and a theosophic stage.
10.
The hermetic hermeneutics, a labyrinth of thought,
a soteriological schema, so carefully was wrought,
a panoply of platitudes, a panegyric ode,
a periphrastic pilgrimage on a sclerotic road,
a logocentric landscape, a semantic, sterile ground,
where epistemological echoes endlessly resound.
11.
A phantasmagorical fugue, a phantasmatic quest,
a syncretistic synthesis of a satori-driven test,
a chthonian chrysalis, a psychopompic plea,
a prolegomenon to the meaning of eternity,
a hierophany of silence, a gnomic, grand display,
a semiotic skirmish at the ending of the day.
12.
The telestic theurgy of a tenebrous abyss,
a psychomachia's conflict, an anamnesis kiss,
a logorrheic lament, a logician's grand despair,
a preterite prevarication in the vacuous air,
a numinous nomenclature, a semantic, secret code,
a thaumaturgical theology on a Sisyphean road

13.
A phantasmagorical fugue, a phantasmatic quest,
a syncretistic synthesis of a satori-driven test,
a chthonian chrysalis, a psychopompic plea,
a prolegomenon to the meaning of eternity,
a hierophany of silence, a gnomic, grand display,
a semiotic skirmish at the ending of the day.
14.
A hegemonic hermeneutics, a logocentric lore,
a teleological terminus on an unknown shore,
the metempsychotic murmurs, a palimpsest of soul,
a metanarrative maelstrom, taking its toll,
the eidetic echoes of a hypostatic rite,
a catachrestic metaphor in the liminal night.
15.
The hypnagogic histrionics of a hieratic play,
a soteriological schema, to lead us all astray,
a thaumaturgical theodicy, a numinous design,
a metanoetic metamorphosis, profoundly serpentine,
a logodaedalic lexicon, a verbal, viscous glee,
a hermetic apotheosis of all we used to be.
16.
The eschatological etchings on a chthonic urn,
the paracausal prophecies from which we cannot turn,
a pataphysical pathos in a pleroma's light,
a peripatetic paradox in this semantic night,
the recondite redactions, a palisade of thought,
a hecatomb of meaning, so arduously wrought.
17.
The panoptic pantomime of a postmodern dream,
a hypnagogic hypothesis, a solipsistic stream,
the epistemological echoes of an epiphenomenal past,
a pharisaic phantasm, destined not to last,
the eidolon of memory, in an autotelic spin,
the phenomenological phantoms that perpetually begin.
18.
A sybaritic synthesis in a symposiac spree,
a xenoglossic utterance for the blind to see,
a procrustean predisposition, a metanoia of the soul,
a numenclatural necromancy, to make the spirit whole,
the hermetic heresiarchs, in their glossolalia's din,
the xenophobic xenia where the cosmic secrets spin.
19.
The logomachy's labyrinth in a scholastic maze,
the phallocentric fallacies of anachronistic days,
the tautological temple, where the sophists sing their song,
the gestalt-shattering grammar, where everything is wrong,
the concatenation of conclusions, from premises so unclear,
a sophomoric saga, both cynically and dear.
20.
The palatial panorama of a paradigm's decay,
the concatenation of coincidences, to lead the mind astray,
the serendipitous solace in a schismatic stage,
a telestic testament in a preterite's page,
the teleological terminus, a numinous nexus near,
a message to transcend, both wondrous and severe.
21.
The psychopompous progress through the hypnagogic haze,
the catachrestic contours of these anomic, listless days,
the logodaedalic lore, a visceral, verbal rush,
the ineffable intentions in the post-apocalyptic hush,
the hierophantic heritage of a hermetic design,
a thaumaturgical tableau, a preterite divine.
22.
A pancosmic panorama in a panegyric ode,
a periphrastic pilgrimage on a sclerotic road,
the logocentric limitations of a semantic, sterile land,
the epistemological echoes, a shifting, desert sand,
the phantasmagorical form of a cosmic, chthonic quest,
the syncretistic satori of a deeply-driven test.
23.
The chthonian chrysalis, a cryptogram of night,
the psychopompic paradox of a disappearing light,
the prolegomenal prelude to a gnomic, grand despair,
the semiotic silence in the teleological air,
the hermeneutic heresy of a theosophic tome,
the soteriological saga, far from the human home.
24.
The tenebrous theodicy of a numinous abyss,
the psychomachian conflict of an anamnetic kiss,
the logorrheic longing of a logician's final plea,
the preterite prevarications of all we cease to be,
the numenclatural notions of a semantic, secret sign,
a thaumaturgical testament, profoundly serpentine.
26.
The chthonic cosmology in a pleroma's sheen,
the peripatetic paradigm of a world yet to be seen,
the epistemological enigma of a nebulous noumenon,
the solipsistic surfeit of a post-human, cosmic son,
the hypnagogic hagiography of an apocryphal text,
the cartographic contradictions, forevermore perplexed.
27.
The antediluvian anguish in the palimpsest of time,
the eschatological echo of a cosmic, chthonic chime,
the ontological oblivion of a syncretic, fading day,
the hecatombs of meaning that perpetually decay,
the cerulean susurrus of a numinous, vacant space,
the synecdochal silence of an undeserving grace.
28.
The heterodox cosmology of a transient, liminal plea,
the eidetic, ethereal essence of what we used to be,
the cataclasmic consequences of a metanoetic blast,
the concatenated conundrum of a fleeting, phantom past,
the jejune justification of a didactic, dreadful fray,
the recondite redactions that perpetually hold their sway.
30.
The autotelic artifice of a hypnagogic dream,
the phenomenological phantoms of a schizophrenic stream,
the psychopompous path through a labyrinthine haze,
the catachrestic cravings of these anomic, hollow days,
the logodaedalic language of a verbose, vicious spree,
the ineffable intention of all we long to flee.
31.
The hierophantic heritage of a tenebrous design,
the thaumaturgical tableau of a preterite, divine,
the paracausal prophecies from a symposiac stage,
the numenclatural nullity of a forgotten page,
the hypostatic hagiography of the sacred and profane,
the heautological history of a constant, psychic rain.
32.
The procrustean predictions of a paradigmatic fall,
the palatial, panoptic panorama over all,
the concatenations of control, a serendipitous plea,
the metanoetic metamorphosis of all we used to see,
the xenoglossic yearning, in a xenophobic, lonely age,
the xenial exegesis of a theosophic, final page.
33.
The hermetic hermeneutics of a soteriological test,
the panegyric platitudes of a final, fading quest,
the periphrastic pilgrimage on a paralyzed, old road,
the logocentric limitations of an unbearable load,
the phantasmagoric fugue of a hypnagogic fright,
the syncretistic satori of an agonizing night.
34.
The chthonian chrysalis, a psychopompic, sacred plea,
the prolegomenal promise of a new eternity,
the hierophantic silence of a gnomic, grand decay,
the semiotic skirmish at the ending of the final day,
the telestic theodicy of a tenebrous despair,
the psychomachian conflict in the vacuous, final air.
35.
The logorrheic lament of a logician's grand design,
the preterite prevarications of a fading, false divine,
the numenclatural nothingness, a semantic, vacant code,
the thaumaturgical theology of a final, heavy load,
the procrustean paradigm of a transcendental, cosmic curse,
the palatial panorama of a hollow, empty hearse.
36.
The concatenations of closure, a serendipitous release,
the metanoetic mourning of an agonizing, final peace,
the xenoglossic whisper of a xenophobic, lonely ghost,
the hermetic hermeneutics of a love we lost the most,
the soteriological schema of a sempiternal, endless quest,
the chthonic cadences of a final, fading, fading rest.
37.
The epistemological echoes of a noumenal, nebulous dream,
the solipsistic sorrow of a stagnant, silent stream,
the hypnagogic hieroglyphs of an apocryphal abyss,
the cartographic crisis of a final, futile kiss,
the antediluvian absence of a palimpsest of years,
the eschatological emptiness that finally, finally clears.
38.
The ontological oblivion of a syncretic, cosmic plea,
the hecatombs of silence for the blind to finally see,
the susurrus of sorrow in a cerulean, empty sky,
the synecdochal sadness as the final secrets die,
the heterodox heartbreak of a liminal, vacant space,
the eidetic emptiness of a final, faded, fading face.
39.
The cataclasmic climax of a metanoetic, final sigh,
the concatenated climax as the fading years go by,
the jejune justification of a long-forgotten, final fray,
the recondite revelation of a final, silent, empty day,
the pataphysical pathos of a paradoxical, final art,
the tautological tear that cleaves the soul apart.
40.
The gestalt-shattering grandeur of a glossolalic, final end,
the sybaritic surfeit that we will never comprehend,
the pharisaic phantoms of an epiphenomenal, final thought,
the numinous nexus of a lesson never, ever taught,
the autotelic agony of a final, fleeting, psychic spin,
the phenomenological silence of what has always been.
41.
The psychopompous silence of a labyrinthine, lonely grave,
the catachrestic catharsis of a life we could not save,
the logodaedalic legacy of a verbose, vicious, final sound,
the ineffable instruction on a sempiternal, sterile ground,
the hierophantic hollow of a tenebrous, old design,
the thaumaturgical tremor of a final, false divine.
42.
The paracausal passage of a symposiac, dying rite,
the numenclatural nothingness of a final, fading night,
the hypostatic horror of a sacred and profane,
the heautological history of a constant, cosmic rain,
the procrustean prediction of a paradigmatic fall,
the palatial panorama of the ending of it all.
43.
The concatenations of collapse, a serendipitous despair,
the metanoetic mourning in the universal, empty air,
the xenoglossic xenophobia of a final, silent word,
the hermetic hermeneutics of a message never, ever heard,
the soteriological sorrow of a sempiternal, fading quest,
the chthonic chill of a final, fatal, fading rest.
44.
The epistemological emptiness of a noumenal, fading dream,
the solipsistic stillness of a final, stagnant, silent stream,
the hypnagogic hieroglyphs of an apocryphal, fading lore,
the cartographic cataclysm of a final, lonely, empty shore,
the antediluvian absence of a palimpsest of ancient years,
the eschatological echo that forever, finally clears.
45.
The ontological oblivion of a syncretic, fading plea,
the hecatombs of heartbreak for the final one to see,
the susurrus of secrets in a cerulean, vacant space,
the synecdochal sadness of a final, fading, empty grace,
the heterodox heartache of a liminal, last farewell,
the eidetic emptiness of a final, fading, fading hell.
46.
The cataclasmic culmination of a metanoetic, final cry,
the concatenated closure as the final, empty days go by,
the jejune justification of a long-forgotten, final fray,
the recondite revelation of a final, silent, vacant day,
the pataphysical pathos of a paradoxical, final art,
the tautological tear that cleaves the universe apart.
48.
The psychopompous stillness of a labyrinthine, lonely grave,
the catachrestic climax of a life we could not, could not save,
the logodaedalic legacy of a verbose, vicious, final sound,
the ineffable instruction on a sempiternal, sterile, empty ground,
the hierophantic hollow of a tenebrous, final design,
the thaumaturgical tremor of a final, fading, final sign.
49.
The paracausal passage of a symposiac, fading rite,
the numenclatural nothingness of a final, fading, empty night,
the hypostatic horror of a sacred and profane,
the heautological history of a final, cosmic, final rain,
the procrustean prediction of a paradigmatic, final fall,
the palatial panorama of the end, the end of all.
50.
From nebulous noumena, a proemial end,
a sempiternal silence, a cosmic, hollow friend,
where epistemes expire in a pleroma's gleam,
and solipsistic visions are a final, fading, fading dream,
the mind, a hypnagogic history, forever and a day,
a final, final phantasmagoria, to fade away.



25.
A procrustean paradigm, a teleological gift,
a metanoetic monolith, a transcendental shift,
the concatenation of causality, a serendipitous fate,
a xenoglossic yearning at the cosmological gate,
the hermetic hermeneutics, a hieratic, sacred lore,
the soteriological sadness on a forgotten shore.
29.
The pataphysical premonitions of a semantic, sterile age,
the tautological teachings of a preterite's final stage,
the gestalt-shattering glyphs in a glossolalia's din,
the sybaritic secrets that perpetually begin,
the pharisaic pretense of an epiphenomenal mind,
the numinous nexus where the human is left behind.
47.
The gestalt-shattering ghost of a glossolalic, final plea,
the sybaritic surfeit of a cosmic, final, fading sea,
the pharisaic phantoms of an epiphenomenal, final thought,
the numinous nexus of a lesson never, never, ever sought,
the autotelic agony of a final, fleeting, psychic spin,
the phenomenological silence that can never, ever, ever begin.

Luminary's Syzygy(ep)


Of the luminary’s syzygy, an antinomian, esoteric, recondite, and ineffable truth,
resonating through the perennial, ethereal, and numinous fabric of existence, in its perennial, and eternal, and nascent youth.
The phantasmagoria of consciousness, a fugacious, dulcet shroud of thought,
quivers, a diaphanous effulgence, with the cosmic stasis, constantly fraught,
with the paradox of being and non-being, the aporia of the cosmic genesis,
and the antediluvian, primordial echoes of the umbra's silent nemesis.
The liminal, nascent surge of preternatural, enigmatic, numinous, ethereal power,
provokes a parallax—a portentous, auric, anachronistic, and teleological, existential, hypnagogic hour,
where the profligate, incandescent, scintillating brilliance of the empyrean gleam,
breaks the crepuscular, somnolent, tenebrous quietude of a half-forgotten, hypnagogic, iridescent dream.
The apogee of a binary star, a syzygy's perfect, enigmatic, and paradoxical form,
is an esoteric, recondite, and numinous paradox in the midst of a silent, eternal, and cosmic, and antinomian storm,
for every effulgent, incandescent, luciferous, and petulant supernova, a nebulous, shadowy, and numinous twin,
a perpetual, antinomian paradox, a hermeneutical, teleological, and esoteric truth, from within,








Blackpower 's Sonnets (ep)

Sonnet 29
Let others feast on beauty's fragile crust,
The outward form, the fleshly, soft design,
That withers swift to unforgiving dust,
And holds no portion of the sacred mine.
They praise the eye, the lip, the slender hand,
A painted vessel, filled with earthly wine,
And seek to claim a place in love's demand,
Ignoring that which makes the spirit fine.
But I perceive the source from which it springs,
The inward light that no dark time can dim,
The melody that my own spirit sings,
Upon a constant and eternal hymn.
And for that truth, I give all outward show,
To know the garden where true blessings grow.



Here are three more sonnets in the requested heavy-diction style, maintaining the Shakespearean form. They explore the corrupting influence of temporal power, the solemn wisdom found in nature's decay, and the solace of eternal truth amidst worldly falsity.
Sonnet 30
The monarch's sceptre, gorged with subjects' plea,
Doth lose its lustre in a tyrant's hand;
The hollow pomp of earthly majesty
Cannot withstand the truth at fate's command.
For on the brow where diadems are pressed,
The cankered spirit leaves its ugly trace;
No silken robes can hide the soul oppressed,
Nor perfumed words conceal a heart's disgrace.
The fulsome praise of cringing, sycophant,
A brittle shield against the common fray,
Will crumble fast, a fleeting, brittle cant,
When truth's strong sword shall find its proper way.
So let the world its fleeting power crave,
While humble truth doth conquer from the grave.
Sonnet 31
The sere and yellow leaf, in autumn shed,
A patient witness to the winter's close,
Doth bear a wisdom in its humble bed,
Which nature's transient, verdant bosom knows.
The faded glory of the dying year,
The silent rustling of the falling grain,
Doth speak a truth to every mortal ear,
That every bloom must suffer from the rain.
And though my spirit seeks a higher flight,
And longs to leave this worldly, mortal coil,
I find a solace in the dying light,
And learn the lessons from the weary soil.
For in this cycle, with its measured pace,
My spirit finds a calm and fitting place.
Sonnet 32
When falsehood, with its sly and serpent's tongue,
Doth poison hearts with venomous deceit,
And fragile faith is broken and unstrung,
And love's first promise turns to bitter cheat,
Then let me turn from every spoken word,
From every vow that seeks to bind and hold,
And seek the truth that can not be con


Blackpower 's Sonnets (ep)

Sonnet 25
The gilded monument, the brazen bust,
That vain men rear to vaunt their fleeting name,
Shall crumble soon to unrememberèd dust,
And be forgotten, like a dying flame.
No epic verse, no storied, grand parade,
Can rescue valor from oblivion’s maw,
For time, with fell intent, hath long purveyed
A final ending to all mortal law.
So let the proud their baseless triumphs hail,
And let their transient glory sound and cease;
Thy constancy, a truth that shall prevail,
Doth grant my soul a measure of its peace.
For in this fealty, all boast I spurn,
And find a solace on my final turn.
Sonnet 26
The perfumed grace of blossoms, rich and fair,
Doth seem a brief and frivolous delight,
For every petal, spent upon the air,
Must soon succumb to time’s despoiling blight.
The gaudy season, with its vibrant hue,
Doth promise much, but cannot long endure,
And leaves behind a melancholy view,
A transient beauty, fragile and impure.
But thy unvarnished worth, a verity,
Doth not depend upon the fickle hour,
Nor is it hostage to the swift decree
Of nature’s unrelenting, changing power.
And thus my heart, to no such law consigned,
Finds its true treasure in thy constant mind.




Blackpower 's Sonnets (ep)

Sonnet 23
The fleeting glimpse of morning's fragile dew,
That hangs like jewels upon the spider's net,
Reflects the sun with colors fresh and new,
A transient beauty that we can't forget.
And so a fragile, momentary art,
Can capture what the seasons can't retain,
The quiet truth of every human heart,
The silent comfort in a falling rain.
But what is born of beauty's quick design,
Is but a promise that the eye perceives,
The lasting beauty that I know as thine,
Is not a flower that the wind relieves.
But like the strength of winter's steady tree,
Thy beauty lasts, for all the world to see.




Blackpower 's Sonnets (ep)

Sonnet 19
When ancient heroes fade from memory's mind,
And all their valiant deeds are lost to rust,
And silent dust is all that they can find,
Consumed by time's indifferent, hungry lust.
Then may my own poor name be cast aside,
And all my mortal strivings come to naught,
For fame is but a fleeting, foolish pride,
And all its empty glories, dearly bought.
But if the truth of what my spirit knew,
The inner light that guided me so long,
Can live within the simple lines I drew,
Then my poor verse will find its worthy song.
For in that truth, though time my form may burn,
My essence will remain, and will return.
Sonnet 20
I see the weary merchant count his gold,
And find in numbers comfort for his soul,
A brittle fortress, where his heart is old,
And keeps his mind from being truly whole.
He locks his wealth in coffins and in stone,
And thinks that riches will keep him secure,
But when the final reaper makes his moan,
His useless wealth will not the soul allure.
So let him keep his coins, and let him hoard,
His hollow treasures, purchased and controlled;
My wealth is not within a bank's record,
But in the story that I have to be told.
And though my purse is empty, and I sigh,
The value of my love will never die.

A Rethinking Of Mabharata's : World Greatest Book Of Poetry.(ep)


The Iliad is one of two major ancient Greek epic poems attributed to Homer. It is one of the oldest extant works of literature still widely read by modern civilisation.
Homer was an ancient Greek poet who is credited as the author of the Iliad and the Odyssey, two epic poems that are foundational works of ancient Greek .
The Trojan Paris having challenged the Greek Menelaus to decide the war by single combat, atruce is made between the armies.The Iliad, a tale of war, describes the feats of individual heroes and the gods on both sides of the conflict.The Mahabharata is said to be longer than the Iliad and Odyssey ...
Original Sanskrit version of MB written by Sage Vyas said to be containing 8800 verses or a little more. The Iliad, set during the Trojan War, tells the story of the wrath of Achilles. The Odyssey tells the story of Odysseus as he travels home from the war.Homer is the presumed author of the Iliad and the Odyssey, two hugely influential epic poems of ancient Greece.Anyway the blogger ibikunle Abraham Laniyan reimagined, reincarnated mabharata's in the african soul.Rewriting an epic as complex and culturally significant as the Mahabharata requires a careful and considered approach. The following is a concept for an original version of the story, set in modern-day India, not africa for now with detailed directions for narrative focus, character development, and thematic resonance.
A modern epic: Kurukshetra 2.0
Logline: A sprawling family business empire, built on ancient principles and modern technology, becomes the battleground for two sets of cousins whose rivalry threatens to dismantle not only their company but the social fabric of the nation.
Setting: The world of Kurukshetra 2.0 is a hyper-modern, high-stakes India. The Hastinapura corporation, a conglomerate founded on ethical business practices, has expanded from a local enterprise to a global technology and infrastructure titan. The conflict plays out in gleaming corporate towers, tech-hubs, and luxury high-rises, contrasting with the sprawling, chaotic urban life and ancient holy sites.
Shift from royalty to corporate power: The dynastic struggle for a throne is reimagined as a battle for control of the Hastinapura corporation. Instead of fighting for a kingdom, the Pandavas and Kauravas vie for CEO and board positions, controlling vast resources, influence, and the future of thousands of employees. This modern setting allows the ancient epic's questions of duty (dharma), power, and justice to be explored through relatable, contemporary struggles.
Yudhishthira (Yudhisthir): The ethical, rule-bound heir, whose adherence to righteousness is his greatest strength but also his most crippling weakness. In the modern story, his struggle is against the pressure to compromise his principles for the sake of market dominance.
Bhima: Not just a strongman, but the charismatic and ruthless head of corporate security. His primal strength is translated into a fierce loyalty to his family and a willingness to use any means necessary to protect them.
Arjuna (Arjun): A tech genius and head of research and development, known for his single-minded focus. His battlefield crisis, the Bhagavad Gita, is re-framed as a panic attack or moral breakdown on the verge of a hostile corporate takeover. Lord Krishna's guidance becomes a crucial, modern-day mentorship.
The Kauravas, led by Duryodhana: A family of ambitious, cutthroat executives who have a legitimate, but corrupted, claim to power. Duryodhana is a charismatic bully driven by a deep-seated inferiority complex and fueled by social media campaigns and public-relations warfare.
Draupadi (Draupadi): An influential, multi-talented media mogul married to the five Pandava brothers, representing their united strength. Her humiliation is a modern-day act of public shaming—a corporate smear campaign or the leaking of intimate photos during a crucial board meeting.
Modern conflicts and themes: The narrative can draw on contemporary themes and conflicts, such as:
Data and surveillance: Instead of spies, information is gathered through data mining and corporate espionage. The dice game is a metaphor for a rigged stock-market gamble or a high-stakes technology bid.
Media and perception: The Kurukshetra war is fought not just with weapons, but in the media. Both sides use social media, news channels, and public perception to sway opinion and justify their actions, highlighting the blurred line between truth and propaganda.
The personal cost of ambition: The human element remains central, showing how the desire for power corrupts and isolates individuals. The story explores the devastating personal consequences of the rivalry, with characters grieving over lost relationships and questioning their own morality.
Corporate social responsibility: The epic's moral and ethical lessons are explored through the company's actions. The Pandavas try to lead with integrity (dharma), while the Kauravas prioritize profit over people, raising questions about modern capitalism and its social obligations.
A fresh narrative structure: The new version will not simply retell the story but rather follow a new structure that mirrors the modern corporate world.
The saga unfolds as an investigation: The story could begin with the aftermath of the "war"—a massive corporate and national tragedy—and be told through a series of flashbacks during a public investigation, perhaps headed by a journalist, a historian, or a new generation seeking to understand how it all went wrong.
Multiple points of view: While centered on the Pandava/Kaurava rivalry, the narrative will offer glimpses into the perspectives of supporting characters. This multi-vocal approach, similar to modern sagas, would show the human cost of the conflict, from the loyal security guard (like Bhishma) torn between two sides, to the ambitious young intern (like Abhimanyu) who is a casualty of the corporate war.
By grounding the epic's core themes of duty, family, and the search for justice in a modern setting, this version of the Mahabharata would offer both a fresh perspective on a timeless story and a relevant commentary on the moral dilemmas of our own time.
It was the kind of city where the dust of the ancient settled on the glass of the new. A city of gods and startups, of crowded backstreets and gleaming corporate towers that pierced a smog-choked sky. In this place, New Hastinapur, the Hastinapura Corporation was more than a company; it was a dynasty. Its patriarch, old Dhritarashtra, was the blind king of this empire, his sightless eyes hidden behind designer shades, his power flowing through the fiber-optic cables that bound a nation. He ran the company not from a throne, but from a state-of-the-art office at the city's zenith, every word a command delivered through the earpiece of his ever-present PA, Sanjay.
But the heart of the empire was diseased. His hundred sons, the Kauravas, led by the charismatic, cunning, and perpetually aggrieved Duryodhana, ran the company's various divisions like feudal fiefdoms. They were a dynasty of privilege and entitlement, their arrogance a byproduct of a lifetime of unquestioned power. Their cousins, the five Pandavas, heirs to their late uncle Pandu's share of the company, were the disruptive elements, the wildcards. Yudhisthir, the eldest, was a software engineer of impeccable ethics, who insisted on writing every line of code with moral clarity, a trait his family both revered and despaired over. Bhima was the muscle, a hulking head of logistics and security, with a temper as volatile as the Mumbai stock market. Arjuna was the prodigy, a brilliant mind in R&D, whose innovations promised to change the world but whose spiritual quest often pulled him away from the cutthroat reality of the boardroom. And then there were the twins, Nakula and Sahadeva, marketing whizzes who, in their own quiet way, kept the family's public image from collapsing entirely.
Their story was not just a family feud; it was a battle for the soul of India.
The friction became a fire when the company's annual festival—a sprawling, lavish affair meant to showcase Hastinapura's dominance—turned into a public humiliation. The Pandavas, having been gifted a plot of land that was little more than a corporate wasteland, had, through sheer grit and innovation, turned it into Indraprastha, a technological hub so dazzling and successful it made the Kauravas' most profitable ventures look like cheap street stalls. During the festival, while showing off the VR capabilities of their new product line, Duryodhana's jealousy was weaponized. He used a glitch he had secretly coded into the VR system, a trick of light and sound, to make it seem as though he had trapped the Pandavas' image in a hall of mirrors. The crowd laughed, assuming it was a playful jest. But to Duryodhana, it was a symbol. He had finally made his cousins look like fools, their righteousness mocked in the public sphere.
This act was the prelude to the corporate game of dice. The game was an all-or-nothing stock market gamble, broadcast live on a national news channel. The Pandavas, bound by their word and goaded by their blind uncle, agreed to play. Shakuni, Duryodhana's devious business advisor, manipulated the market, his fingers dancing on the keyboard, his algorithm designed for one purpose: to bankrupt the Pandavas. One by one, the Pandavas lost everything: their assets, their stakes in the company, their personal fortunes. Finally, in a desperate, final throw, Yudhisthir bet their wife, Draupadi, the brilliant media mogul who held a key board position and controlled a substantial portion of the company's PR. She was the Pandavas' most powerful asset, a force of nature in her own right.
When she lost, the world watched in horror. Duryodhana, drunk on victory and fueled by ancient grudges, ordered her brought to the board meeting. There, in front of the horrified board members and a live-streamed audience, he ordered his brother, Dushasana, to publicly shame her. Dushasana, a tech-savvy bully, began to leak private, doctored images and personal communications, designed to destroy her reputation and leave her with nothing. It was not a battle for a throne, but a public slaughter of a woman's dignity, her personhood. Draupadi, her voice trembling but not breaking, used her considerable legal and media influence to expose the hack and the manipulation, but the damage was done. The online world, a faceless mob of trolls and sycophants, had already taken their side.
The aftermath was a silent, festering wound. The Pandavas were sent into corporate exile for thirteen years. They were forced to leave Hastinapura Corporation, their names wiped from the company's database, their access cards deactivated. The first twelve years were spent in professional obscurity, working odd jobs under assumed names, building their skills and biding their time. The final year was spent in the city of Virata, where they worked undercover, honing their craft in preparation for their eventual return.
They came back to find New Hastinapur completely changed. The Hastinapura Corporation, under Duryodhana's careless and greedy management, had become a hollow shell of its former self, its ethical foundations eroded, its reputation in tatters. They demanded their rightful share of the company, but Duryodhana, blinded by hubris, refused. He offered them five empty conference rooms, five meaningless job titles, a paltry insult to the years they had spent in exile. The stage was set for the final, and deadliest, corporate war. It would be fought not with swords, but with data, with media, and with the loyalty of a nation that was no longer sure who to trust. The Kurukshetra was no longer a battlefield; it was everywhere.
The city waited, its digital heart thrumming with the low-frequency hum of a brewing storm. The fourteen years had not been thirteen, not by the rules of the calendar, but by the calculus of corporate maneuverings and media manipulations. The Pandavas, now returning from their corporate exile, were no longer the naive innovators but seasoned players in a game whose rules had been rewritten in their absence.
Yudhisthir, no longer just a coder, had spent his exile mastering the intricacies of financial law, his righteous principles now buttressed by a steel-trap mind for contracts and loopholes. He was the calm before the storm, his every measured word a calculated move. Bhima, his raw strength honed by years of managing underground supply chains and outmaneuvering corporate spies, was now a silent, imposing force, his loyalty a sharpened weapon. The security division he now managed was a shadow government within the company, its agents loyal not to the board, but to the promise of a just future.
Arjuna, too, had been transformed. He had spent his time away from the company, not in solitude, but in the tutelage of Krishna, an enigmatic tech guru and venture capitalist whose influence stretched from the corridors of power to the deepest recesses of the dark web. Krishna’s mentorship had taught Arjuna to see beyond the lines of code and the market metrics, to understand the deeper, ethical implications of the technologies he once simply created. The battlefield of Kurukshetra was now the server room, the clash of swords the DDoS attacks and the relentless, digital warfare that defined their age. Arjuna’s great crisis—his Bhagavad Gita moment—had occurred in a moment of panic on the trading floor, where the lines between friend and foe, between ethical and unethical, had blurred into an existential dread. Krishna's guidance, delivered through an encrypted messaging app, had re-centered him, reminding him that the duty was not to the outcome, but to the right action itself.
The Kauravas, in their unchecked ambition, had hollowed out the company. Stock prices soared, but the infrastructure rotted. Under Duryodhana's leadership, ethics were for press releases, not practice. He had brought in Karna, a brilliant and fiercely loyal competitor from a rival startup, to challenge Arjuna directly. Karna, ostracized by the mainstream corporate world due to his "unconventional" background, had found in Duryodhana a benefactor who saw his talent and cared little for his origins. Their professional rivalry, broadcast through a relentless series of targeted smear campaigns and product launches, became the defining narrative of the new Hastinapur.
When the Pandavas returned, their demand was simple and unshakeable: their rightful share of the company, the shares of Hastinapura that had been theirs from the beginning. Duryodhana, still full of a petty, vindictive hatred, scoffed. "A few cubicles, a few titles, and that's it," he had offered, a final, public humiliation designed to remind them of their lesser status.
But Yudhisthir was not playing for trinkets. He invoked a clause in the company's charter, a long-forgotten ethical manifesto written by their forebears, that bound the corporation to a higher moral standard. The corporate war was no longer just for control; it was for legitimacy, a fight for the company's soul.
The final confrontation was no simple board meeting. The two families, each with their own network of allies, investors, and media influencers, mobilized for all-out war. The battle was a complex web of lawsuits, cyberattacks, and media manipulation. Bhishma, the old, loyal COO, was torn, his professional duty to the corporation conflicting with his personal ethics. He saw the rot at the company's core but was bound by a vow of loyalty to the blind patriarch who had given him everything. He became a symbol of the old guard, a cautionary tale of what happens when ethics are subjugated to blind loyalty.
The corporate war, the modern Kurukshetra, was about to begin. It would be fought on the financial markets, in the courts, and in the court of public opinion. And in the heart of it all, Arjuna would once again find himself facing his rivals, but with a new understanding, a clarity born of Krishna's quiet mentorship. The prize was not just a company, but the very moral foundation of a nation built on its principles. The game of dice was over; the real war had begun.
The battle lines were not drawn with swords but with legal filings and press releases. The corporate war, dubbed "Kurukshetra 2.0," raged not on a dusty plain but across the hyper-connected expanse of the city, fought in the merciless court of public opinion. Duryodhana, emboldened by his seemingly unassailable position and surrounded by a phalanx of legal and PR advisors, believed victory was assured. He had orchestrated a hostile takeover bid, a financial blitzkrieg designed to crush the Pandavas utterly, wiping out their ethical hub, Indraprastha, and reclaiming his family's lost dominance.
The Pandavas, however, had the unblinking eye of Krishna, the enigmatic tech titan, on their side. He wasn't a general but a strategist, his advice delivered in hushed, encrypted conference calls that bypassed the Kaurava's sophisticated corporate surveillance. When Arjuna, beset by doubts about the moral cost of destroying his own family's legacy, suffered a panic attack in the shadow of a glowing server bank, it was Krishna's calming voice that came through his earpiece, not of a god but of a mentor, reminding him that the duty was not to the outcome, but to the right action itself. The true victory, Krishna had explained, lay in upholding the company's founding principles, not in simply winning a corporate fight.
The first casualty of this war was, predictably, a person of honor. Bhishma, the stoic Chief Operating Officer, loyal to the blind old Dhritarashtra to a fault, was caught in the crossfire. He had seen the corruption but chose corporate loyalty over personal righteousness, his silence a terrible weapon in the Kaurava's hands. The Pandavas, on Krishna’s advice, forced a public accountability hearing that cornered Bhishma. Unable to defend the indefensible, he 

Blackpower 's Sonnets(ep)

Then blogger ibikunle Abraham Laniyan s poet in the sonnets below presented beginning first with first two original sonnets in the Shakespearean tradition, observing the 14-line structure, iambic pentameter, and ABAB CDCD EFEF GG rhyme scheme. They also contain a thematic turn, or volta, before the final couplet. Enjoy the reading like the rest Of the sonnets.


Sonnet on the Digital World


The pixel's fleeting glow, a mimic sun,
Illuminates a face in silent room,
While urgent messages, like swift things, run
Through unseen wires to escape the gloom.
A world of voices rises in a stream,
Each seeking ears to lend a moment's grace,
A silent promise, or a waking dream,
Recorded moments held in time and space.
But in this network, vast and intertwined,
We lose the touch of fingers, warm and real,
The subtle language that the eyes impart, the minds
That know the truths the screen can not reveal.
So let us lift our gaze from light's false start,
And find the beating of another heart.

Sonnet on a City at Dawn

The city sleeps, but in its quiet breath,
The faintest promise of the coming day,
A waiting hush that holds the hand of death,
And chases shadows from their long-held sway.
The streetlights dim, pale sentinels of night,
As golden fire climbs beyond the glass,
And morning's brush begins to streak with light
The silent pavements where the hours pass.
Now horns will blare, a thousand engines roar,
The day's great drama soon will seize the stage,
And all the quiet will be held no more,
As work and worry fill the daily page.
But for this moment, in the peace I find,
The city's soul is gentle and sane "



The two original sonnets are wriiten in the Shakespearean style, observing the 14-line structure, iambic pentameter, and ABAB CDCD EFEF GG rhyme scheme. Thematic content, like much of Shakespeare's own work, deals with love and the passage of time.)


Sonnet on a Love Lost to Time


The years have wrought a change upon thy face,
And silver threads now gleam amidst thy hair;
The quickening pulse gives way to slower pace,
And wrinkles mark the burdens of our care.
I see the truth that time hath sought to steal,
The fading hue of youth, the tired eye's light;
The fragile vow which promises to heal,
Grows dim before the onset of the night.
But yet, within these lines that age doth trace,
My mind recalls the days when youth did burn,
And holds thy beauty in this time-bound space,
For love's true lesson is that we must learn
That what is lost in flesh by death's design,
In memory and spirit will be mine.
Sonnet on the Power of Words
When mighty empires crumble into dust,
And monuments of brass and stone decay,
When all is lost to time's devouring rust,
And man's proud works have melted all away,
Then shall my words, though writ in humble ink,
Endure, outliving all the victor's fame,
Whose fleeting glory on the world's dark brink
Fades like the whisper of a dying name.
For in this verse, thy beauty I preserve,
Not subject to the grave's unkind command,
But fresh as springtime, holding its reserve
Against the ruin of the shifting sand.
So shall my art grant thee eternal life,
Beyond the turmoil and the mortal strife.

(Take your pick of Shakespeare's sonnets if you have reads and compare them to mine below and above along with a modern English interpretation of each one to aid your understanding. Shakespeare wrote 154 sonnets published in his 'quarto' in 1609 but i wrote mine within a week Of labour
In the style of a Shakespearean sonnet sequence, here are three more original sonnets. These continue the exploration of love, time, and perception, observing the 14-line structure, iambic pentameter, and ABAB CDCD EFEF GG rhyme scheme.)


Sonnet 3
Not marble, nor the gilded monuments
Of princes, shall outlive this powerful rime,
But you shall live within these printed tents,
And mock the swift destruction wrought by Time.
Your image, framed in syllables and line,
Shall not be conquered by the fading years;
No envious dust shall cloud this fair design,
Nor shall your grace be drowned in future tears.
So when the world, in ruin and decay,
Is buried deep and turned to common clay,
The sun of summer, stealing its bright shine,
Shall be remembered by these lines of mine.
So long as mortal words have tongues to tell,
Your worth and form within this verse shall dwell.
Sonnet 4
I watch the fleeting shadow of the day
Draw down its curtains on the tired ground,
And see in this a mirror of my way,
For youth's high fire is by age unbound.
The fleeting bloom of youth, so fresh and bright,
Must wither, bent by winter's icy hand;
And fading beauty, once a lover's light,
Shall pass away like footprints on the sand.
Yet fear not, for the soul doth not decay,
And in that place where mortal things depart,
A truer beauty shall hold sovereign sway,
The silent truth that lives within the heart.
So let the seasons change, and sorrows rise,
If true love's witness lives behind your eyes.
Sonnet 5
When fortune, like a fickle breeze, doth blow
Upon the sails of men in proud command,
And with a careless whim, brings down the low,
And lifts the high upon a shifting sand;
Then let my spirit find its steady hold,
Not in the praise that strangers would impart,
But in the secret treasure that I hold,
The silent comfort of a single heart.
For titles, wealth, and power must depart,
And all the glories that men build in haste,
But steadfast love, a fixed and honest chart,
Shall guide my ship across the watery waste.
So let the world its fleeting fortunes crave,
While I possess the love my spirit gave.

(As a continuation of the sequence, here are three more sonnets in the Shakespearean tradition, exploring themes of aging, the nature of beauty, and the bittersweet quality of memory. Each maintains the 14-line structure, iambic pentameter, and ABAB CDCD EFEF GG rhyme scheme.)

Sonnet 6
The winter of my years, with chilling hand,
Doth steal the flush of summer from my cheek,
And on my spirit lays its stern command,
That strength of former days grows cold and weak.
The golden harvest of a youthful prime,
Has yielded place to fields of frosted gray,
And time, the thief that marks each passing chime,
Hath borne my fleeting pleasures far away.
Yet though my outward form may find decay,
And youthful follies no more hold their sway,
My heart, more seasoned with the passing sun,
Still knows the race that must at last be won.
For in this stillness, when the world grows old,
The inner fires burn, a stronger, deeper gold.
Sonnet 7
The sculptor’s art, which shapes the marble stone,
And paints the canvas with a master's grace,
Can fix a moment, or a beauty known,
And lend a timelessness to form and face.
But art is but a shadow of the thing,
A hollow echo of the living fire,
And though the poet's words may softly sing,
They cannot capture all of my desire.
For in thine eyes, a deeper truth I see,
A living form that mocks the static hand;
The change and movement of eternity,
That all the artful world can't understand.
So let the statues crumble into sand,
While living beauty holds its quick command.
Sonnet 8
When quiet thoughts recall what once was bright,
A phantom rose in memory's soft embrace,
I find a sweet and melancholy light,
Reflecting back a long-departed face.
A whisper, lost among the passing years,
A fragrance held within a cherished name,
Recalls the joy and overcomes the fears,
And warms the ashes of a vanished flame.
But in this tender summons of the past,
A silent ache accompanies the joy,
That what was loved was not to ever last,
A fragile toy that time would soon destroy.
Still, let me weep for what the years have claimed,
For love itself is worthy to be named.

(Continuing the sequence in the manner of Shakespeare, here are three more original sonnets, numbered accordingly. They explore the relationship between the natural world and human love, the deceptive nature of appearance, and the self-reflection that accompanies time's passage.)


Sonnet 9
The fleeting beauty of a summer's day,
The rose that blushes and then sheds its bloom,
All nature's transient wonders pass away,
Consigned to winter's everlasting tomb.
The sun that warms the earth with golden light,
Must in the evening draw its curtains deep,
And weary stars, that guard the lonely night,
Return to slumber while the world's asleep.
But in this change, a deeper truth I find,
That constant is the course on which we gaze,
The seasons turn, a promise to my mind,
And love, like spring, shall find its endless days.
So while the changing world doth wax and wane,
My love for you, a constant, shall remain.
Sonnet 10
Those eyes which shine, as stars in winter skies,
And lips that promise pleasure to the touch,
And words which flow like music to surprise,
Declare a truth I know to be too much.
For on the surface, beauty can appear,
A painted mask to hide a barren heart,
And honeyed words, whispered for all to hear,
Conceal the venom of a serpent's dart.
Yet let me not presume to judge thy show,
For if my sight is blinded by the light,
Then all the fault within myself must grow,
For seeing only what appears so bright.
I must accept the risk within the prize,
To find the truth beyond the sweet disguise.
Sonnet 11
When I review the hours that have flown,
And think upon the words I failed to say,
The opportunities I have not known,
And all the moments that have slipped away,
A silent ache, a burden of regret,
Doth weigh my heart with sorrows past and gone,
Like one who wakes, with every lamp unlit,
And finds no comfort in the coming dawn.
And yet, if life is but a passing stage,
And all its sorrows nothing but a part,
I will not let my memory turn a page,
That holds the image of a broken heart.
But write new moments on a cleaner slate,
And bravely face the coming of my fate.


(To continue the sequence in the style of Shakespeare, here are three more original sonnets. These poems build on the themes of love, loss, and the nature of artistic creation that were developed in the previous entries.)


Sonnet 12
When I behold the dancer's graceful flight,
The body's knowledge silent in the air,
I see a beauty born of moving light,
A fleeting magic that no words can snare.
So is your spirit, swift in every turn,
A vibrant story told without a voice;
A living fire, which all my senses learn,
That finds its meaning in a single choice.
But motion must at last submit to rest,
And tired limbs their vibrant song must cease,
The silent tomb will claim this art confessed,
And bring the body its eternal peace.
Yet, from that grace a memory does rise,
To live again within a lover’s eyes.
Sonnet 13
The bitter truths the passing years impart,
Do cast a long and melancholy shade,
Upon the eager workings of my heart,
And on the promises that time hath made.
For every step that walks the turning ground,
Doth leave its trace and wear the fabric thin,
And every thought, in contemplation found,
Marks out the journey that we live within.
So now I see the future in the past,
The ending written in the early stage,
That what is loved can never, ever last,
Nor be protected from the wasting age.
But in this knowledge, there is peace to find,
To love what is, and leave the past behind.
Sonnet 14
My wit, a vessel on a restless sea,
Is battered by the tempest of the time;
My artful words, which long to sing of thee,
Are broken echoes of a fading rhyme.
For in this age, where all is new and strange,
And fickle minds are captured by the speed,
The ancient heart, in need of no exchange,
Finds little purchase for its planted seed.
But I will trust the current of my soul,
And find the shore that lies beyond the foam,
For truth in love must surely make me whole,
And bring my lonely, wandering spirit home.
And though the world forgets what I have said,
My honest verse will live when I am dead.



(Take a look at three more sonnets in the style of a Shakespearean sequence, continuing the themes of love, time, and human frailty.)


Sonnet 15
When I behold the sun at noon-day stand,
And mark the swiftness of the flying clouds,
And watch the shifting beauty of the land,
That Time with restless progress daily shrouds,
My mind, like restless wind, must surely rove
Through all the changes that our life hath shown,
And find that what I treasure, what I love,
Is but a passing tenant, briefly known.
Then what defence can mortal beauty make,
Against the tyrant's unrelenting hand?
What mortal grace can for its being take
A place secure in Time's devouring sand?
But in this thought, a certain comfort lies:
That love itself, no matter how it dies,
Is not diminished, but ascends the skies.
Sonnet 16
The words I write are but a barren art,
A pale reflection of the living form,
For mortal hand can never reach the heart,
Nor calm the spirit in its constant storm.
So do not trust my lines to speak for me,
Nor hold my verses as a truthful sign,
For in this prison of my poetry,
I fail to capture what is truly thine.
The vibrant truth that in your being lies,
Is not a thing that ink can ever paint,
And all the praises of my simple cries,
Are but a shadow, fragile and so faint.
But if my clumsy lines have brought thee fame,
Then love my verse, though it does

A Rethinking Of the Mabharata's :World Largest Book Of Poetry Ever Written(ep)

predictably, a person of honor. Bhishma, the stoic Chief Operating Officer, loyal to the blind old Dhritarashtra to a fault, was caught in the crossfire. He had seen the corruption but chose corporate loyalty over personal righteousness, his silence a terrible weapon in the Kaurava's hands. The Pandavas, on Krishna’s advice, forced a public accountability hearing that cornered Bhishma. Unable to defend the indefensible, he resigned, a broken man who had lived his life by a code that was now defunct. The media, a ravenous digital beast, devoured his reputation, leaving nothing but a pile of bitter headlines.
The battle raged on. The Pandavas, using their years of working in obscurity, unleashed a series of targeted attacks on the Kaurava’s weaknesses. They exposed a trail of unethical labor practices in Duryodhana’s most profitable division, the same one Bhima had once run. Draupadi, having rebuilt her media empire from the ashes, launched a series of blistering investigative reports that exposed the tax evasion and insider trading that had funded the Kaurava’s lavish corporate lifestyle. The tide began to turn.
Yet, Duryodhana held his most powerful card—Karna, the brilliant, ruthless chief of engineering. Karna, who had risen from obscurity due to his talent and Duryodhana's patronage, was fiercely loyal to his friend and despised Arjuna, the privileged heir who had mocked his humble beginnings. The corporate world had never forgotten their clash at a tech showcase years ago, when Karna, uninvited, had challenged Arjuna's prowess and been met with ridicule from the Pandavas. Now, Karna developed a kill-switch, a program designed to utterly dismantle the Pandava's financial and technological infrastructure. It was the digital equivalent of a nuclear missile.
In a hushed, late-night meeting, Krishna met Karna. He revealed the secret Karna had suspected his entire life: that he was not the son of a driver but Kunti's first-born, the eldest of the Pandavas. A stunned Karna, for a moment, saw the truth, but his years of loyalty and bitterness outweighed blood. He would not betray the man who had given him a chance, even if that man's cause was unjust. Yet, a shadow of doubt had been planted. He swore to Krishna that he would not target the younger Pandavas, only his old rival, Arjuna.
The battle climaxed on the floor of the Hastinapura Corporation's massive data center. Duryodhana and Bhima, the two mace-wielding strongmen, faced off in a virtual reality cage match, a media spectacle designed to settle the war. It was a vicious, no-holds-barred fight, fought with gloves but felt with real ferocity. Just as Duryodhana seemed to be winning, a small, subtle signal from Krishna reminded Bhima of Draupadi's humiliation and his vow. In the VR world, Bhima landed a crushing blow to Duryodhana's thigh, an unfair move that violated the "rules" of the match but satisfied an ancient oath. The virtual crowd gasped. The real-world result was catastrophic for Duryodhana, wiping his entire fortune and leaving him exposed and bankrupt.
The fall of the Kauravas was swift and brutal. With Karna's kill-switch now worthless and Duryodhana publicly ruined, the empire crumbled. But the victory was hollow. So many had been hurt, reputations destroyed, and families fractured. Yudhisthir, crowned the new CEO, looked out over a corporation in ruins, its soul poisoned by a battle it had barely survived. He had won, but at what cost? He looked at his brothers and his wife, saw the pain in their eyes, and realized that a moral victory gained through deception was no victory at all. The epic had ended, but the real work of redemption was only just beginning.

The Chromatic Refusal and other Collections (ep)

The blogger ibikunle Abraham Laniyan a poet provides the critical rendition for this wonderful piece Of poetry with Collections Of other fifty poems below.Enjoy the reading.


The Chromatic Refusal

The glass of a spent hour,
where crimson bleeds its geometry
into a silent, curdled sphere.
A paper boat, a folded lung,
flutters its single eyelid
across the unwatered plain.
We wore the masks of other peoples’ mirrors,
and the echo of their smiles
became the static in our teeth.
The architecture of forgetting
erects its own invisible scaffolds,
and we climb without a sun.
The lexicon is a broken compass.
Each syllable, a lost pin.
A city sleeps in the throat of a wren,
while the parallel streets forget
the reason for their alignment.
The Scaffolding of Absence
An open field where only shadows bloom.
The scent of non-existence, a green rust.
The clock's hands, in their frantic spiral,
etch the unmapped coastline of what never was.
The furniture of your memory,
a polished void.
I run my hand across its grain,
a tactile silence.
A telephone rings in a sealed room,
and the dust settles like a pact.
The sky, a blueprint for a structure
that cannot be built.
We draw the lines of a missing cage,
and the bird inside sings its own
architectural sorrow.
The Treatise on Smoke
The smoke has an adverbial syntax,
a syntax of departure.
It never arrives at the noun.
We watched its grammar undo itself,
a sentence losing its meaning
at the edge of the roof.
The rain is a translation
of a forgotten language,
but we read it in our native tongues.
The pages are soaked and illegible.
The narrative, a ghost in the gutter.


The Geometry of Aphasia

A rusted alphabet sings from the silo,
each letter a different grain of quiet.
We draw the blueprints of a lost harvest,
our hands forgetting the shape of the plough.
The well is full of misremembered water.
The glassblower’s breath,
a translucent heresy against a fixed form,
refuses the bottle, prefers the air.
And the echo of a dropped cup
rearranges the furniture of the moment.
The grammar of this light is a fracture.
We learn the syntax of the splintered prism,
and call the new color by a forgotten name.
Inhabitation of a Glitch
The house was built on a temporal fault line.
Breakfast is served backwards,
the last mouthful a promise of raw egg.
We sleep in the static of a channel-searched-for,
where the ghost of a sitcom laughs and disappears.
The walls have grown soft with repetition,
the wallpaper a collage of yesterday's newsprint.
Your face, in the window,
is an artifact of a higher resolution,
but the wind is a corrupting algorithm.
All windows face inward now,
reflecting a storm that is only ours,
a flickering of code against the pane.
The future arrives pixelated,
and we learn to love the mosaic of its missing data.
The Catalog of Non-Existence
A library of blank pages,
indexed by the scent of things that are gone.
We find the chapter on the color of your voice,
and feel the weight of its missing narrative.
The sculptor carves the inverse of the statue,
leaving a hole in the shape of a missing thing.
The negative space learns its own geometry,
and casts a more perfect, more present shadow.
Each breath, a cancelled telegram.
The message was important, but the receiver
was built from the same dust as the forgetting.
The story we carry is a map of a place
that never was, but is all we have left.



Cartography of the Unmappable

The geometer of absence draws a line,
not between two points, but away from all of them.
The compass needle, a ghost in the hand,
quivers towards the cardinal sin of nothing.
A coastline of forgetting,
etched in the salt of a forgotten tear.
The tides reverse their logic,
pulling land from sea,
and the gulls’ cries are a lesson in geometry
that we no longer remember.
We sleep with the charts folded,
the creases holding a geography of what might be.
In the morning, the map is a new skin
and the old country is a phantom limb.
The Taxonomy of Rust
Rust has a memory,
a catalog of rain, of wind, of neglect.
Each flake is a word for a history
that has failed to be written.
The train tracks, a sentence without punctuation,
run towards a horizon of pure inference.
The wind, an orator of the unspeakable,
speaks the language of erosion.
The key turns in the lock of a non-existent door,
and the tumblers fall into a pattern
of a language we have almost,
but not quite, forgotten.
The Specter of the Anachronism
The photograph is of a future that never was.
The faces smile with a joy that has yet to be invented.
We hold it up to the light of a fading present,
and watch the corners curl into a question mark.
The old men in the park play chess with stones,
each move a reversal of a move not made.
The children chase a ball of pure theory,
its bounce a sound no one can truly hear.
The ghost is a paradox. It arrives not from the past,
but from a future that has chosen not to exist.
It rattles not with chains, but with the quiet hum
of all the technology that never was built.
It whispers the last words of a sentence

1. The Almanac of Silence

The calendar pages are made of air.
The months unspool into an un-year,
and the clokface has forgotten its geometry.
The birds build nests of stolen syntax,
and the wind is a thief of whispers.
We trade in metaphors of the unheard.
2. The Unstitched Fabric
The tapestry was never woven.
The loom is a ghost in the parlor,
its threads unraveling into a blueprint for absence.
The figures were promised, but never appeared,
and the colors were lost in the dye-vat of forgetting.
3. The Negative Portrait
The painting is not of a person,
but of the air that surrounded them.
The absence is a positive space,
and we recognize the outline of the hollow,
a precise, familiar lack.
The crack in the cup is a river
with a single, unmovable bank.
We measure its geography
with the calipers of lost time,
and learn the names of its tributaries.
5. The Architecture of Forgetting (II)
The blueprints are drawn in disappearing ink.
Each line is a promise of a future
that has chosen not to exist.
The foundation is built on a memory
that collapses as it is recalled.
6. The Glass of a Spent Hour (II)
The shards are vowels,
the syllables of a broken sound.
We piece them together,
but the word has changed its meaning,
and the message is the absence of its sender.
7. The Treatise on Smoke (II)
The smoke is a grammar of refusal.
It rises from the pyre of language,
a negation in the shape of a cloud.
Its meaning is found in the ashes
and the words that were not spoken.
8. The Scaffolding of Absence (II)
The skeleton is a map of a missing house.
We walk its empty rooms,
tracing the hallways of what might have been.
The dust of a forgotten echo settles,
and the floorboards remember a step
that was never taken.
9. The Chromatic Refusal (II)
The color has a hollow center.
We look into its heart and see
the pastels of a canceled sunrise.
The pigment was mixed with a silence
that refuses to be painted.
10. The Inhabitation of a Glitch (II)
The window is a mirror of a different time.
We see our reflections, but they are not our own,
the ghost of a future self, unbidden,
looking back from a screen of fractured glass.
11. The Catalog of Non-Existence (II)
The library has been cataloged by its dust.
Each grain holds the weight of a forgotten story.
The books are blank, but their titles
sing a lexicon of what we have lost.
12. The Geometer of Absence (II)
The line is drawn not with ink, but with a finger,
on a pane of freezing air.
The point is a ghost in the geometry,
a place where nothing can ever begin.
13. The Taxonomy of Rust (II)
The rust is a history of entropy.
The molecules remember a different form,
a strength that has been forgotten.
The color is a memory of a time
when iron was a promise, not a wound.
14. The Specter of the Anachronism (II)
15. The Chronosophy of a Stain
The stain is a time traveler.
It arrives from a future of spilt things,
a premature memento of an accident.
It marks the linen with a premonition,
a color of what has yet to be.
16. The Calculus of Dust
The dust motes are planets
in a cosmology of inertia.
Each fleck holds the gravity
of a lost moment, a forgotten sun.
We breathe in this miniature universe,
and it settles in the lungs, a quiet history.
17. The Lexicon of the Unspoken
The words that were not spoken
have their own grammar, their own rhythm.
They fall into the gutters of conversation,
a quiet, ignored torrent.
We are deafened by their silence.
18. The Ontology of a Whisper
A whisper has no body.
It is a ghost of a sound,
a verb without a noun.
It travels through the air,
a message that only exists
in the moment of its dissolving.
19. The Cartography of the Inaudible
We draw maps of the silent territories,
the landscapes of the unheard.
The mountains are the quiet sighs of the earth,
and the rivers are the streams of unwept tears.
We navigate by the absence of sound.
20. The Metaphysics of a Key
The key is a question.
It asks for a lock that may not exist.
We hold it in our hands, a promise
of a door that was never built.
Its weight is the burden of possibility.
21. The Grammar of a Shadow
The shadow is a pronoun,
referring to a thing that is not there.
It moves with a borrowed momentum,
a parasitic dance on the periphery of light.
22. The Geometry of a Scar
The scar is a map of a wound that has healed.
The lines are the roads of a remembered pain.
We trace its topography with a finger,
and read the story of a violence
that has become a quiet geography.
23. The Phenomenology of a Tear
A tear is a conversation with gravity.
It holds the weight of a emotion,
a drop of liquid syntax.
It falls to the ground, a period
at the end of a forgotten sentence.
24. The Calculus of a Glance
25. The Ontology of a Knock
A knock is a question that has already been asked.
The door holds the memory of its answer,
the wood remembering the concussion.
We stand outside, in the vestibule of conjecture,
and listen to the echo of the refusal.
26. The Taxonomy of a Sigh
A sigh is a punctuation mark for the unsaid.
It holds the weight of a sentence
that was too heavy to be spoken.
It is the white space on the page,
the breath that holds the story.
27. The Lexicon of a Gesture
A gesture is a word that has lost its sound.
The hand moves in a choreography of meaning,
a silent argument with the air.
We interpret the vocabulary of its movement,
but the dictionary is in a foreign language.
28. The Metaphysics of a Reflection
A reflection is a conversation with a ghost.
It speaks in the language of light,
a replica of a thing that is not there.
We look into the water, and see a parallel self,
living in a quiet, impossible country.
29. The Geometry of a Broken Bowl
The pieces are a constellation
of a past function.
We hold the fragments in our hands,
and the shape of the missing whole
is a ghost in the negative space.
30. The Cartography of a Dream
The maps of our dreams are drawn in shifting sand.
The landmarks are fluid, the rivers are memories.
We wake with the geography of a lost country
in our minds, and a compass of disorientation.
31. The Taxonomy of a Wound
A wound is a new geography on the body.
The tissue is the language of a healed violence.
We read the lines of the scar,
the history of a moment of unraveling.
32. The Chronosophy of a Tear (II)
A tear is a drop of a different time.
It holds the weight of a grief that has already passed.
We catch it on a fingertip, a small, wet relic,
a memory in liquid form.
33. The Ontology of a Hiss
A hiss is a sound that has no destination.
It is a message sent to itself,
a closed loop of meaning.
We listen to its sibilance,
and hear the language of a refusal to connect.
34. The Metaphysics of a Stain (II)
A stain is a footprint of a forgotten moment.
It marks the memory of a past spilling.
We stare at its geography, and see the ghosts
of the liquid, the container, the moment.
35. The Calculus of a Sigh (II)
A sigh is an equation of release.
The variables are air, breath, and emotion.
Its solution is a momentary peace,
the answer to a question we never asked.
36. The Grammar of a Glance (II)
A glance is a sudden sentence.
Its subject is a fleeting thought,
its verb, an unspoken action.
Its syntax is a flash of light,
a brief, unreadable message.
37. The Phenomenology of a Key (II)
The key is a promise of an opening.
It holds the potential of a future.
We carry its weight in our pocket,
the small, metal burden of a closed door.
38. The Taxonomy of a Whisper (II)
A whisper is a sentence that has no ending.
It is a sound that has chosen not to arrive.
We follow its trajectory into the air,
and find only the silence of its disappearance.
39. The Cartography of the Unspoken (II)
We draw maps of the conversations we never had.
The streets are named for unspoken words,
the houses are the quiet of missed opportunities.
We are the sole inhabitants of this phantom city.
40. The Calculus of a Knock (II)
A knock is a calculation of a future.
The force, the cadence, the location.
It predicts the opening or the refusal,
the arrival or the turning away.
41. The Metaphysics of a Hiss (II)
A hiss is a language of negation.
It speaks in the vocabulary of emptiness.
We listen to its hollow resonance,
and hear the story of a missing thing.
42. The Grammar of a Reflection (II)
A reflection is a mirror of a verb.
It shows the action without the actor.
We watch its movements, and see a ghost
of a motion, a syntax of a shadow.
43. The Phenomenology of a Stain (III)
A stain is a fossil of a memory.
It holds the shape of a past moment,
the imprint of a liquid violence.
We read its geography, and see the history
of a forgotten spillage.
44. The Taxonomy of a Tear (III)
A tear is a drop of a different gravity.
It falls to the ground, a small, wet punctuation.
Its weight is the final word of a sentence
we no longer remember.
45. The Calculus of a Whisper (III)
A whisper is an unproven equation.
It speaks in the variables of air and breath.
Its solution is the silence that follows,
the quiet after the unsaid.
46. The Ontology of a Glance (III)
A glance is a moment of pure inference.
It holds the history of a thought,
the blueprint of a future action.
Its meaning is found in the stillness
of the moment that follows.
47. The Metaphysics of a Knock (III)
A knock is a question that is already answered.
The door holds the echo of the refusal,
the wood remembering the impact.
We stand outside, in the vestibule of silence.
48. The Grammar of a Hiss (III)
A hiss is a verb of denial.
It speaks in the tense of a future that never was.
We listen to its quiet, sibilant sound,
the language of a negative space.
49. The Phenomenology of a Reflection (III)
A reflection is a ghost of a conversation.
It speaks in the language of light,
a replica of a thing that has left.
We look into the water, and see a final word,
the quiet of a completed thought.
50. The Taxonomy of a Stain (IV)
A stain is a memory of a time.
The geography is the language of a past moment,
the history of a forgotten emotion.
We trace its edges with a finger,
and read the final chapter of a forgotten story.



4. The Taxonomy of a Fissure
The ghost is a photograph of a future
that was deliberately avoided.
It haunts the alleyways of lost opportunities,
a silent, monochrome regret.
A glance is a sudden, unreadable equation.
We catch it on the corner of an eye,
a flash of unknown variables.
Its solution is the history of a thought,
and we can never solve for the answer.
.

October 18, 2025

Black Power 's Sonnets (ep)

Sonnet 27
My heart, a thrall to passions fierce and twain,
Doth wage a civil war within its bounds;
One part a loyal vassal, to thy reign,
Another roves on unfamiliar grounds.
This mutinous and schismatick desire
Doth vex the steady course of my true mind,
And breeds in me a discomfiting fire,
To leave the grace for which I am designed.
I strive against this fell and wanton strain,
That bids me seek a hollow, brief delight,
And court the perils of a bitter pain,
And give my soul to endless, starless night.
Though base affections seek to turn my way,
My steadfast love shall hold its holy sway.

Black power's Sonnets(ep)

Sonnet 28
That perjured tongue, which promised thee its troth,
Did plant within my heart a poison'd seed,
And nourished it with sweet and sugared broth,
To cover up its perfidy and greed.
The serpent's hiss is music to the ear
When uttered from a source we hold so dear,
And every false account and subtle sneer,
Did but increase my fond and foolish fear.
But now, with reason's sharp and bitter blade,
I cut away the lies that you have spun,
And find the truth in shadows you have made,
Like winter's fading promise of the sun.
And though the wound will ache and never mend,
Thy faithless heart can no more me offend.