There’s Old and Old

There’s Old and Old

Sappho (/ˈsæfoʊ/Greek: Σαπφώ SapphṓAeolic Greek Ψάπφω Psápphō; c. 630 – c. 570 BC) was an Archaic Greek poet from the island of Lesbos.” ~ Wikipedia

Fragments of papyrus
A fragment of teracotta pottery, written on with black ink.
“Most of Sappho’s poetry is preserved in manuscripts of other ancient writers or on papyrus fragments, but part of one poem survives on a potsherd.[46] The papyrus pictured […] preserves the Tithonus poem (fragment 58); the potsherd […] preserves fragment 2.” # Wikipedia

The word papyrus is so old we do

Not know its origin, Pre-Greek perhaps.

The oldest dynasty of Egypt knew

It.  Through millennia it did not lapse

Until Byzantium or thereabouts.

We easily forget that poets wrote

In air with singing.  Sappho’s only routes

To us across the centuries were in note

And heart on breezes till at last she found

Her way to scrolls papyrus gave her three

Hundred years before the Christians.  Sound

Became a document more like decree

Or sculpture.  Poetry of lust was set

Forever in an ink of soot and sweat.