The Geminid Meteor Shower
(after Phaethon)
The night sky splits—
a black canvas torn
by the bright shards
of a broken god’s son.
Each meteor:
a sliver of Phaethon’s shame,
stony-iron wreckage
from the chariot he could not command.
The sky opens
to receive the fragments
of an asteroid’s crumbling heart—
iron and stone,
bitter with memory,
trailing fire through December’s hush.
A thousand streaks of light—
the reckless children of Phaethon—
plummet in brilliance,
burning the air
with the wishes of millions.
Each one a warning.
Each one a wound.
Each one a prayer
extinguished mid-flight.
And so they fall—
vaporized dreams,
reduced to cosmic ash,
swept beyond the veil of horizon,
where even memory fades.
No glory in the fall.
Only vapor.
Only dust.
Only the story of a boy
who dared to touch
what belonged to gods.
And we, below,
lift our faces in awe,
unaware we are watching
a thousand executions—
wishes gone astray,
ambitions turned to ash,
as winter dawns
on the limits of desire.
About the Creator
Stacey Mataxis Whitlow (SMW)
Welcome to my brain. My daydreams are filled with an unquenchable wanderlust, and an unrequited love affair with words haunts my sleepless nights. I do some of my best work here, my messiest work for sure. Want more? https://a.co/d/iBToOK8

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