Poem: Cryo-Hell
In July 2010, my poem Cryo-Hell was published in M-Brane SF #18, edited by the incredible Christopher Fletcher. M-Brane SF didn't normally take poetry, but they accepted my poem. it was an honour to be published alongside great authors who are shining stars themselves, such as Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Patty Jansen, and Joyce Chng!
Cryo-Hell
Brave travelers, they called us:
A million colonists firmly abandoned to the cosmos,
Bound for a fresh, clean world,
A new home.
No turning back. Say goodbye, wish us well,
Let us go. Forever.
Board the cryo-ship, take the pill,
Settle into the chilled capsule, go to sleep.
Still, still, still.
Revered automatons to whom we faithfully and willfully entrust ourselves
Tend us, and decide when we have arrived.
Then we will rise to a new warm globe,
Like getting up next morning in spring.
Yet four centuries have been harshly stolen,
Stolen by Old Father Time himself.
Lonely generations back home
Born and turned to cold dust while we sweetly slumber on.
But I am awake.
Failed icy medicines locked inside my body murmur falsehoods, ineffective.
I am awake.
Chemical impotence rends me from the safe grip of Morpheus.
I am trapped in cryonic solitude, bathed in liquid nitrogen,
Held awake for over thirteen billion long shivering seconds.
I call for help,
Frozen and dead,
Conscious and alive,
Knowing there will be no release.
I weep, a solitary shriek of terror
Loud, endless, yet silent,
Deaf to the still ears of those around me,
A mournful cry.
Alone in this crowded, frigid, interstellar necropolis,
I do not dream.
I simply scream.
© Damon Lord, 2010