They say you catch more flies with honey than with vinegar
So why are there so many flies on Vinegar Hill?
Black-bodied, red-eyed sons of Satan
Buzzing, droning across the stones
Tasting them with their feet
Do they taste death still?
Are these the children of 1798
Whose fathers crawled across rosy flesh grown pale
And nibbled the cheeks of innocence?
Does the decay on their toes bring back memories
Of the day when bankers and farmers,
Artists and lawyers,
Bachelors and family men
Took up arms against each other
For nations and for glory?
Do they remember the charge of red jackets,
The young men, the future of our kind,
Flushed with victory, splattered with blood,
As they trampled the golden grass to the peak
Only to find their enemies women, their foes babes?
And then these men, no different from us,
Found they could not stop,
And poured out death and lust on the helpless,
On the beautiful and pure,
On the agonized, the screaming, the bewildered,
And they shuddered in despair
As they discovered
They liked it.
So why should the flies not swarm Vinegar Hill
When the Lord of the Flies is its victor and conqueror?
Jonathan, what a lovely, haunting piece. Thank you!