
an on-line poetry magazine
for the 21st century
Winter 2025-2026
Kelly J. Powell
LETTER HOME FROM ALEXANDER THE GREAT TO HIS MOTHER
on the occasion of the Spring Solstice 323 BC
My darling, dearest mother
Is it time yet for me to return home?
I have conquered the world
as we know it and I am homesick.
I have never encountered anything
as beautiful as our Aegean sunsets
or as satisfying as your homemade
moussaka from your mother’s recipe
on a cold winter’s night.
My victory over the Persian King
came too easily, intrigue
from his closest friend
killed him from behind
before my troops reached him
making it a hollow one
I am weary from battle
and from being Pharaoh
all these accolades and week long
wedding celebrations
are meaningless
without your warm kiss on my forehead
after a job well done
or Aristotle’s bad in-jokes
or even father’s tirades
about Macedonian tax structure.
I have been writing a song about
loving an ordinary woman
who lived across the street.
my Roxana cannot hold a candle
to her, though I loved my wife at first sight.
You must never tell her
about the other one.
You must protect her and my son
as best you can when I have gone.
Once I left a white rose
on this woman’s doorstep
and I never even learned her name
lest I succumb to a mortal life
of hard, honest work
without treachery and intrigue
simple as birdsong.
grueling with its hardship
for what is there left to conquer
once you’ve conquered everything?
How I miss the familiar
and routine of the marketplace.
How I would’ve preferred
to cast my net with fisherman
knowing that we all meet
the same fate,
that it will only matter if we are loved.
Mother, please,
I have seen my destiny
and my coin at the ready
for Charon’s ride
for quite some time now.
Let me come home, I beg you,
one last time to hear the sparrow
nesting on the side porch
the fire in the hearth
and the heroes resting
among the stars
as you see them now
from your window.
The daffodils are just coming to life
fooled by the warming climate,
the snowy owl calling for his mate.
Let me take my inglorious end
as an old man reveling
in his remembering
of glory and passion, aye me,
this will not be my fate
foretold like an ancient map
drawn on Egyptian papyrus
in an oracle’s temple.
Would that I could die in my sleep
with my children and grandchildren
gathered round me
kissing their heads
one after another in warm embrace
leaving peacefully as a lamb.
But it is written I am to die alone.
This love of fate weighs on me
and the memory of your face comforts me.
My thoughts have turned
melancholy and seeing you
would cheer me
in an indescribable way.
This is not how our story
will be told.
I must ride elephants to the river
tomorrow and the day after
do something grander still
and then it will all be gone.
Remember me if you can
and love me
to the moon and back.
With deepest, undying love,
your Alexander
Kelly J. Powell is a poet native to Long Island and a graduate of SUNY Binghamton’s Creative Writing Program in 1988. She has performed widely on Long Island and NYC. She has a new book of poems called Posthumously Yours from local gems press available on Amazon.
