LEAK IN THE MASK
Thought is the 
riverbank,
anxiety, the rushing 
current.
Drowning man can't 
get
to the safety of his 
mind,
grabs at his 
hallucinations,
kicks at his luxurious 
memory.
He's going-under in the watery 
flames,
the tumult of a withering brain 
storm.
Ideas can't spin their 
satellites
through his flooded 
hemispheres.
His body is a 
cripple
struggling to clamber 
up
on the rungs of disappearing 
function.
Nothing matters 
but
the crushing of the 
lung.
Only his tattoos can 
dream.
Drowning man embraces the 
unreal,
expands into the 
chloroform
of all-absolving 
death.
He's a planet trying to lasso 
into orbit,
a meteorite striking the 
landscape
of himself.
Look up in the 
sky,
see bear and archer, shimmering 
lion.
But see drowning 
man
pulled under by the 
cosmos.
See drowning man
bouncing off the metal of his 
ship,
fragments of death
sucked up by life's sleek 
magnets.
EXPLORERS
In this age, the stars are 
all.
On one side, Gamma 
Cassiopeiae,
on the other, Mu 
Cephei.
A jaunt through Bode's galaxy 
-
some samples 
gathered,
rogue planets 
avoided,
a thousand angry 
rockets
firing at our sparkling 
tail.
For our lives to be 
elsewhere,
acceleration, warp, is all that's 
needed.
Throw away the 
books.
Facts come at us like 
lasers.
Blue cascading 
mountains,
three headed 
creatures,
hitchhiking thought 
forms,
unbelievable 
beauty
stepping from a 
water-fire.
Space and vision lock 
in
and away we go.
It's a golden time
for travel, for 
exploration.
Juice up the 
engines
and distances fly from 
us.
City and jungle, hill and ravine 
–
we name them after dead 
men.
We zip by other 
adventurers
from far-flung 
worlds.
Their missions mirror 
ours.
They must have 
some
dandy words for 
Earth.
Here comes a great 
blackness.
Blackness - another word for 
revelation.
More dangers. No 
problem.
Strange sicknesses 
-
meet the 
universe's
premier med lab.
And look, this 
army
tries to blast our 
hide.
Can't hurt us.
Our ships have 
shields.
Our egos likewise.
John Grey is an Australian born poet. Recently published 
in International Poetry Review, Chrysalis and the science fiction anthology, 
“Futuredaze” with work upcoming in Potomac Review, Sanskrit and Fox Cry Review.  
 
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