Skip to content
logo
  • Read
  • Originals
  • Visual
  • Submissions
    • General
    • Competitions
  • Membership
  • About Us
  • Log Out
  • Log In
  • Register
Search
Log In Register
logo
Search

Earth Day

By Peter Verbica

Illustration by Allen B. Thangkhiew

Come sit with me

for a moment.

I am the observer mind

and you built me.

Look there, the movie

is playing,

but Jimmy Stewart

isn’t in it.

But I will be your

Clarence Odbody:

that cartoon of Virgil.

Let us descend

to the tenth circle:

where a species

destroys itself.

There they are:

The wildings

of lost Christmases

weaving sticks

and stringlets of catgut

into their hair,

setting traps for

the unsuspecting

squirrel and crow:

another day

to compete

for food,

sharpen

the business end

of brooms,

chip the edges

of obsidian,

and pass the time

lighting bonfires

by the river.

Of course,

it’s all explained

easily

with the death of

last High Church Episcopalian,

laid to rest

with Western Civilization

under a field

of white stones.

“Every year,

the rains and

falling trees

take a few,”

the Wiccan priestess

explains

as she boils bones

in her Dutch oven.

And, in candor,

who can blame the diaspora

as they mill listlessly:

after all,

with the advent of AI

and our devolution into

thin clients:

who isn’t hungry

for more brains?

The goat soap

in garish tissue paper,

the rows of rings

made of cheap silver

and circus glass,

the bogus honey

re-labeled by kitchen chemists:

these Pagan art fairs

were shuttered long ago,

raided in broad daylight

when Chomsky’s

disciples realized that they

could eat their own.

Now and again,

there’s the chattering

of teeth

and whistling

of dead poets

in the branches.

But to say this brave

old world isn’t full of joy

would be shortsighted:

just ask those

goofy-grin raiders

as they nibble

on coffee beans

culled from

an industrial

tilt-up.

Checking my calendar,

I notice the coincidence:

all of this occurs

exactly 70 years

after our first celebration

of earth day.


Share:

Posted On: April 18, 2026
← Previous
→ Next
  • Read
  • Originals
  • Visual
  • Submissions
    • General
    • Competitions
  • Membership
  • About Us
  • Log Out
  • Log In
  • Register
logo
  • Half And One Magazine Vol. 1
  • Submissions
  • Terms & Conditions
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2026 Half and One