We crashed the raping, ruinous waves Of Acheron and the tremulous Styx, To stand defiled before the Lethe Memorial souls dying in our midst. The river spewed a gelatinous rime And buried by the jagged frost, Filed souls drank their fill And fell in a spiritual holocaust. Next came I the water gaped To dissolve my lifelong sorrow; I knelt and cupped black purulence Drank, but rescinded my swallow. For too much untold grief, Lies dormant on the Lethe; Death fades no treading pain Of the soul that draws its breath. Etched upon the cresting cry Stands the scar of mortal kin; My elder lying breathless His son a trench of sin. I surfaced from her womb, Memories in tow; Sunken eyes, wrought with tides Of the agony below. I wailed for those disheartened, lost; And, harboring the vile Lethe, I spat it on the affluent brow Of the white deliverer’s face.