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The Two Dons




I

In all your hot-brained madness, you were right.

We didn’t understand. It seemed to us

You’d lost your mind, but we had lost our sight.

All we could see was the sun and choking dust

Blinding us to your suffering. While night

Alone stands guard, your sword and armour rust. 

Our sadness cannot salve, cannot enhance

Your last adventure, your last broken lance.


II

Tirant lo Blanch would forgive us your death

Finding a way to make it seem splendid

The Golden Ass brays out all magic breath

Giants populate the hills attended

By whirling white circles, a shibboleth

Challenge rings out as vast arms descended.

Enraptured by the giants we have built

We think there are no windmills left to tilt 


III

Years later, when archeologists came, 

Your body lost in changes to the church, 

Your flayed rib and your crippled arm betrayed

Your identity. The barefoot nuns searched 

And ransomed you. An Algiers slaver’s trade

That pulled you from the dark, alive but scorched

By prison’s psychic vortex, to the balm

Of discalced sibilant assuaging psalms

 

IV

And when he came to die, he did not perne, 

Retract, apostatise. Cuirasses rust, 

Released to cobwebs. No longer did he yearn

For combat, but ceded the field to trust.

Cervantes sent him that he might return 

To sanity through madness, light through dust.

With Sancho at his bed we sadly kneel

Praying we know what is and isn’t real.

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