First, he taught us to use the dead as shawls in the viscous winter escorting his arrival. Next, he taught us to forget the dead were dead, our dead, and dead because of a wager we did not consent him to make with the thin-lipped savior of his own pantomime. Third, he delivered on promises that blew off the tops of homes in places whose names he could not pronounce. Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown1 forced to fit a quiet country that has no need for a crown. Where once was honey unhived competition. The drones meant for war prepared for war. We dusted our shoulders of Shadows’ silent reconnaissance, surveilled as practice for a slaughter we did not consent to. The royal parade pride’s malady stomped its sequence through beat drums of human skin from which emanated a rhythm impossible to decipher. I too would shake my ass to the sound of stars falling night- wise into a pit of myth-bent nomenclature if the names sounded like home. Under eroding circumstances, this kingdom could become home. Under eroding circumstances my gasp has become home enough, love not consented to yet detected from beneath my mindless right hand pressing its devotion to ritual over my heart, flag above waving heaven and blood into the smoke-diffused sky I quake my way through anthems beneath. Rockets glaring off my breath forced to evidence I belong. The crown is crooked. We straighten it with vote-vapid hands. The crown sits too heavy for the king to carry on his own. When it falls “O say can you see,” strikes its inquisition. My knees, summoned to straighten at the hinges permission most questionably opens from, strike the earth with a kiss. Could I kneel my way to revolution? Would that goad the king to unzip?
King Henry IV, Part Two |
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