The Lion's Pride Lion's Pride Volume 12 (Spring 2019) | Page 25

Conquest William McKinnie We've studied quite a bit of poetry over the quarter in Introduction to Literature, and the best pieces always seem to share two attributes: they make a broad, insightful observation about humanity or life in general; and they make an unorthodox, sometimes quirky statement about you, the reader. This poem has neither, but at least it rhymes. We came ashore to a new world Where seas of methane boil; Our drills and augers came unfurled And raped the virgin soil. We popped up tents of metal sheet And cowered from that sun. As I reposed in Spartan suite, We vanished, one by one. And in the morning I beheld Nary a soul but me. And lo, unearthly tracks foretold: This place held more than "We." Henceforth, this place was named as "cursed," Though you know now—they were here first.