We will do our apocalyptic poetry on Saturday, as the weekdays are being taken up by our International Book Reviews series.
Quiet a few of our upcoming novels take up the thought "the death of one is a tragedy, the death of millions is a static".
We all face our own inevitable apocalypse.
Not to be anywhere, 
And soon; nothing more  terrible, nothing more true
 Philip 
Larkin 
I work all day, and get 
half-drunk at night.   
Waking at four to soundless 
dark, I stare.  
In time the curtain-edges will 
grow light.   
Till then I see what’s really 
always there:   
Unresting death, a whole day 
nearer now,   
Making all thought impossible 
but how   
And where and when I shall 
myself die.   
Arid interrogation: yet the 
dread 
Of dying, and being dead, 
Flashes afresh to hold and 
horrify. 
The mind blanks at the glare. 
Not in remorse   
—The good not done, the love 
not given, time   
Torn off unused—nor wretchedly 
because   
An only life can take so long 
to climb 
Clear of its wrong beginnings, 
and may never;   
But at the total emptiness for 
ever, 
The sure extinction that we 
travel to 
And shall be lost in always. 
Not to be here,   
Not to be anywhere, 
And soon; nothing more 
terrible, nothing more true. 
This is a special way of being 
afraid 
No trick dispels. Religion 
used to try, 
That vast moth-eaten musical 
brocade 
Created to pretend we never 
die, 
And specious stuff that says 
No rational being 
Can fear a thing it will 
not feel, not seeing 
That this is what we fear—no 
sight, no sound,   
No touch or taste or smell, 
nothing to think with,   
Nothing to love or link with, 
The anaesthetic from which 
none come round. 
And so it stays just on the 
edge of vision,   
A small unfocused blur, a 
standing chill   
That slows each impulse down 
to indecision.   
Most things may never happen: 
this one will,   
And realisation of it rages 
out 
In furnace-fear when we are 
caught without   
People or drink. Courage is no 
good: 
It means not scaring others. 
Being brave   
Lets no one off the grave. 
Death is no different whined 
at than withstood. 
Slowly light strengthens, and 
the room takes shape.   
It stands plain as a wardrobe, 
what we know,   
Have always known, know that 
we can’t escape,   
Yet can’t accept. One side 
will have to go. 
Meanwhile telephones crouch, 
getting ready to ring   
In locked-up offices, and all 
the uncaring 
Intricate rented world begins 
to rouse. 
The sky is white as clay, with 
no sun. 
Work has to be done. 
Postmen like doctors go from 
house to house.
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