A Bicycle Criticises Concorde For Not Observing Butterflies
Within a fiction, 
set in Samurai Japan, 
there are a hundred men, 
on a beach, rows, dead.
 
They were betrayed, not by their leader, 
who let an enemy ooze behind lines, 
not by their simple honour; 
no, they were betrayed by their author.
 
“So what?”, you might say, 
“they’re only characters in a cheap novel”, 
“if that”, you might add, 
“hardly worth the sentence.”
 
But had any one of them, 
dead to sharp that moment’s plot, 
lived beyond their author’s laziness; 
they could be: what?
 
Perhaps these non–born, 
having snatched creation 
for such a callous blink,  
deserved their self–assassination; 
they could have chosen a better book.
 
The film was, of course, successful.
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