Elegy for the Fragile Universe
By William Pan, grade 7, Washington.
How will the world end?
Will it end with alien settlers
from another galaxy?
Or will it be our own
war-torn fault, the world’s
sparkling Hawaiian sunsets
and buzzing Chinese streets
melting and emptying
any number of ways? Now
that Earth has warmed
like sand condensing
into a fragile universe
of glass, we are sturdy
yet fragile. We scowl before
we embrace. We pray
between arguments while saving
the world. Will we have to
flee this green haven? Will we
have to ribbon our faith
into the carbonated air? Or
shall we fit another
planet more to our liking?
Is any of this needed
to save us? Will this stop us
from existing, or can we stop
ourselves? Whether the world dies
or not, we must
cherish what we have—
whether the world succumbs
to bots or we continue
to laugh at movies
and jokes with each day
—William Pan, grade 7, Washington. He writes: “I wrote (this poem) because I realized that we need to unite to stop climate change from ruining our world… I have written many poems and short memoirs that explore culture and family. I am drawn to poetry because I can play with language and build imaginative worlds that enable me to explore things I can’t explore in the real world.” William has recently joined us as one of our student interns.”
