Antipodes
We gnaw at our global apple,
the starved worm of our curiosity
digging past roots of old knowledge,
spitting the seeds of ancient cities.
So vested in our investigations,
we dig through ancient Serdica
through stone stacked on bone,
emerging short of any coveted shore,
just shy of New Zealand.
But New Zealand was never new anyway,
just like here is always somebody’s there –
just a name for the end of a worm’s zealous tunnel.
So we’d surface to sink
into nonchalant waves.
That is, if we don’t first dissolve
into the mute molten metal,
the core of iron and nickel
pulling us inward –
the magnetic force of all burning questions,
a furious force
to melt all but hunger.
3 thoughts on "Antipodes"
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The worm worming its way throughout the poem was a nice touch, both for the movement and the theme. I enjoyed this a lot.
Love your use of language here.
Ambitious poem with lots to say and plenty of densely crafted language to say it with. I salute you.