Australopitheca Africana

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Graceful and slender
She knows no yesterday
Nor would she grasp tomorrow
But reaches once more for Za tonight
While her stars in ebony heaven explode
And utters another sweet moan
After he smiles a white smile
As bright as the moonlight
She won't remember.

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TzaraTzaraalmost 14 years ago
This is kind of a cool poem.

Intellectually intriguing, as your work often is for me. When in hominid development did something like "love" enter into things?

I quite like the lines implying the lack of experiential memory, though I'm not sure that I really believe that a hominid would be so lacking in that. Is there research that suggests that? And if so, why would she reach for a partner that she would have no particular memory of?

Perhaps I'm misreading this, or overanalyzing it.

Anyway, as usual, quite enjoyed it. Technical note: I think it should be "Australopithecus africanus." Plural would, I think, be something like "Australopithecae africanus."

Not that that matters. 8-)

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