The Desert Traveller

Lost in a storm, I came across, by chance,
a group of mounds – an eerie, haunted place.
Sand grains ascending in a spiral dance
revealed a statue, its eroded face
preserving still an air of arrogance,
and at its feet, part-hidden by a layer
of wind-blown detritus, words could be found.
I read potentes, then opera mea
videte …  oh, what certainty he must
have felt, this Caesar – but I looked around
at monuments abraded into dust;
the desert wind now rules his empty city.
As if to answer me, a sudden gust
revealed the final words: … et spem perdite.*

* The Latin words collectively translate ‘Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair.’
Inspired by Shelley's Ozymandias


Comments

Mohamed Sarfan's picture
Dear Poeter, Even the desert wind does not forget to tell the cruelty of loneliness banging on the shoulder of man. The desert is a place full of mysteries and magics in this world where paths and journeys are unobstructed. All The Best My Dear Friend; Write More Congratulations

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