A ‘falchion’, from the Old French
is a sword. It cuts swathes like the Persian scimitar
and digs through bowels as the Chinese Dao does.
But it is its own, itself: a sword, from the Old French.
A specific means of death.
The incision that was made becomes apparent
and blood hurries to the surface after the mid-air cartoon pause.
The stench of blood undrying. Battles rewind, soldiers come to
life.
And what you were saying was that people were dying
on the end of this particular kind of knife?
Knowledge is the great unstaunchable wound.
A sword is a sword is a sword. But
what sort? And a word, yes, means nothing by itself,
is simply a point which impales, pins a specimen of reality to the
paper
so we might squint and imagine how it once flew.
And nowthey're everywhere, and when someone wields the word
I hold my hands up. I say, yes, a sword, from the Old French. Yet
before
I must have run through many pages, escaping harm, not knowing
the pointed syllables had sharp edges and that I scanned so close
to danger
and failed to notice the sun catching at the quilloned crossguard.
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