
Less visibly tragic than expected,
less cinematic in its appeal:
No resurgent dinosaur rampaging
through the street, trampling
parked cars & injuring billboards
The sky is still its sure azure,
the mountains still maintain
their mammoth masses. Yet
skeptics are now more than
certain of the world’s ending.
Evolutionists say bipedalism
marked man’s ascendance
to the zenith of Animalia.
Soon as we woke to the power
in our hands, we unlocked
the Pandora of Enlightenment.
Our fingers yielded industry
& when we built the first machines,
we reveled in cosmic ecstasy
We salivated at the efficiency
of the mindless slave till scrutiny
revealed the atrophy of the workforce
Look, the people said, we have
sacrificed hands to the machines
Are we the gods or the slaves?
In response, the engines rumbled
like oracles, incoherent in
their operational din
In that epoch, man & machine
was much like man and mule
Subservient spider & sapient supervisor
associated in simple symbiosis.
Man had not hunched in perpetual
genuflection over the handheld gods,
presenting endless queries &
pursuing endless pleasures
Man still prided themselves lords,
the animal intelligentsia. After all,
the dolphin with its famed brain
avail themselves to man’s circus
The bee with its social structure
is an exhausted topic in academia
The beasts prowling forests
respect the authority of bullets –
None a match for our prowess
but the machines terrified
with its appetite to be man,
to be more man than man.
A head that holds the entire lexis,
the tireless legs of an arachnid,
electric neurons weaving algorithm
& nuance with reckless rapidity,
What now, the skeptics wonder,
can man tender as fact of superiority
when the facsimile is becoming
a smarter factotum?
If the machines displace us,
are we the gods or the slaves?
In response, the machines,
like idols, offer radio silence.
Man looks at the machine
& the machine looks at man
The eerie exchange ignites recognition.
Their eyes glisten with knowing,
& plenty is left unspoken.
Abdulbaseet Yusuff is a Nigerian writer. His works appear in Indianapolis Review, Up the Staircase Quarterly, Cutleaf Journal, Brittle Paper, Pidgeonholes, and elsewhere.

This is a thought provoking read.
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