I Left My Heart In Carcosa
I returned to the land of my birth in the year of 1895.
The great stone walls of the city were crumbled.
My steed whinnied with fear,
When I left her parked and tied to the massive iron gate.
Through the rubble of a battered city,
I sauntered.
The landscape of my youth spread out before me, torn asunder.
The homes of kith and kin annihilated. The rhythm of my boots
On the cobbled stone was all that that calmed the rising tide
Of anger and despair that churned within me.
I ascended the broken steps to the Hall of Strength.
The entrance to the Imperial Dynasty of America.
It was here amid the pale moonlight and foetid stench of ruin that
I found the King in his tattered robes
And yellow.
He stood and prodded searing coals in the pit of fire.
He wore a pallid mask.
A mask?
No mask!
How is it that so magnificent a kingdom had fallen?
Betrayal.
The betrayal of my cousin, my blood.
My King assured me a reckoning, a resurgence.
The campaign would require
New method.
I removed my armor and unsheathed my sword.
This metal was cast into the flame
And melted down into vapour.
Kneeling, I sung “Cassilda’s Song”.
My King took the brand of the Yellow Sign
And emblazoned my chest with its call.
All men would see it
And heed the Last King
In service of the lost.
(My cousin, the Betrayer, would never marry and Constance would die alone.)
Upon exiting the shattered city, I stopped and stared to the sky.
The dark stars that hung, now that the twin suns hid behind the lake Hali,
Pulsed the power of conviction into my heart. It swelled and rose
To join its brothers in the Heavens.
As I rode upon my galloping mount,
Across the burnt and ashen fields,
I knew the mystery of the Hyades
Below the circling of strange moons.
My tears were dry and my voice was dead.
The song of my soul could only ring true
In lost, dim Carcosa.