by Brett Rutherford
GOD HAS
Poems, work in progress, short reviews and random thoughts from an eccentric neoRomantic.
by Brett Rutherford
GOD HAS
The Titans were a nasty lot. Saturn (Kronos in Greek) always devoured his own offspring to prevent a new generation of gods. A rock was substituted for Zeus, so that the boy could be reared in secret in an oak tree. Later he would attack his father, cutting him open and releasing his brothers and sisters from the Titan's belly.
by Brett Rutherford
by Brett Rutherford
by Brett Rutherford
after Meleager, Greek Anthology, V, 215
by Brett Rutherford
by Brett Rutherford
by Brett Rutherford
by Brett Rutherford
by Brett Rutherford
by Brett Rutherford
You’re late. Is that dinner?
Put your club by the door.
The child is not home yet,
God knows where’s it’s gone.
Maybe for good this time.
Sit. The broth is ready.
Same as yesterday.
What’s in the sack? Looks
like it’s still moving.
Is
that blood on your mouth?
by Brett Rutherford
When giant beasts roamed forests
sweltering, and boiling seas
brewed monsters ammoniac,
when Titans tread volcano’s edge’
sinkholes appeared in one place,
while in another, peaks
jagged with metallic ores
reared up to pierce the sky.
Ice vanished, replaced by storms
whose displaced waters
roared with rage, and fell
again upon the stunned ground.
It was not a kind earth,
brute with physics,
savage in every season,
sorting the myriad of life
with cancellation, apex
species crushed down
to the fossil record.