REVOLUTION

they live as if everything

is settled in the world.

but nothing is settled.

not our dreams, nor our fears,

nor the boundary between things.

the land isn’t settled, nor the realm of sleep.

nor the deep mines where our fathers weep.

nor the deep wells where

mothers call out our names.

those walls of steel never kept out

the eyes of hunger that wander the world

like thunder. those stony eyes that devour

the poor with a cold gaze,

those tower blocks, those men who live

on dust and sleep on stones,

those mothers with their teeth

falling out from mercury in their food,

those children whose lungs will

not carry them through life

what do they know of boundaries,

what do they know of the gods

of the street, the gods of hunger.

nothing is settled. not our place

in the world nor our place among the dead.

the rich have not locked up all the dreams

or the power that grows in rage.

generations live on dust and debris

and are pale as ghosts but the god

of hunger powers their bodies with the secret

electricity that drives galaxies.

on the city’s edge they swell and grow.

their only education is the text of truth

which the world delivers without humour.

nothing is settled. those who think they will

inherit the earth because they’ve mortgaged

the sun will find on the eve of their usurpation

that the grim horsemen are on the horizon.

the earth shifts and howls. the sands have

turned into people. the graves speak

lucid prophecies. there’s nothing

to inherit, because nothing is settled,

except the thunder after sleep.