The cause is Ozymandian. The map of Sapokanikan is sanded and bevelled, the land lone and leveled by some unrecorded and powerful hand which plays along the monument and drums upon a plastic bag. The "Brave Men and Women So Dear to God and Famous to All of the Ages" rag. Sang: "Do you love me? Will you remember?" The snow falls above me. The renderer renders: "The event is in the hand of God". Beneath a patch of grass, her bones the old Dutch master hid. While elsewhere Tobias and the angel disguise what the scholars surmise was a mother and kid. Interred with other daughters, in dirt in other potters' fields above them, parades mark the passing of days through parks where pale colonnades arch in marble and steel, where all of the twenty-thousand attending your foot fall and the cause that they died for are lost in the idling bird calls, and the records they left are cryptic at best, lost in obsolescence. The text will not yield, nor x-ray reveal with any fluorescence where the hand of the master begins and ends. I fell, I tried to do well but I won't be. Will you tell the one that I love to remember and hold me? I call and call for the doctor but the snow swallows me whole with ol' Florry Walker and the event lives only in print. He said: "It's alright," and "It's all over now," and boarded the plane, his belt unfastened; the boy was known to show unusual daring. And, called a “boy”, this alderman, confounding Tammany Hall, In whose employ King Tamanend himself preceded John’s fall. So we all raise a standard to which the wise and honest soul may repair, to which a hunter, a hundred years from now, may look and despair and see with wonder the tributes we have left to rust in the parks, swearing that our hair stood on end to see John Purroy Mitchel depart for the Western front where our work might count. All exeunt, all go out, await the hunter to decipher the stone, and what lies under. Now the city is gone. Look and despair. Look and despair.