Corruption and inequality. The rise of persecuted cults 
and their role interpreting wildfires and crop failures.
How this was possible by loss of conviction in science
and technology, while everywhere roads and engines
and hydraulics were taken for granted. Barbarians.
A turning point was the crossing of the Danube.
Hadrian’s wall at edge of empire also signalled the end,
the cost of maintaining the military industrial complex.
(Who is to say if mass shootings are cause or effect, ditto
the sinkholes of terrorism that open under your feet).
Growing suspicion that enables the surveillance state
by easy stages. Incompetence, particularly over climate
changes, so the few in wealth play, while the working
poor descend into chaos. Over-reach. Viruses
(virtual and otherwise) that infect the cities. Add famines
bubbles and collapses. The encroach of outside forces
within the Empire coupled with the usual pogroms
and disappearances. But increasingly, the flawed idea
of inevitability that makes limbs heavy. A drugged torpor
that is only sleep if that is a forgetting of wakefulness.

Angela Gardner

Angela Gardner is a Welsh Australian writer and visual artist. “Slippage”, her manuscript-in-progress, was shortlisted for the Helen Anne Bell Poetry Bequest Award 2023. Her verse novel The Sorry Tale of the Mignonette, was shortlisted for Wales Book of the Year, 2022 and a UK National Poetry Day recommendation.

More by Angela Gardner ›

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