THE CURSE
For three hundred years, while its fame spread 
across the world, the little town had stood here at the 
river's bend. Time and change had touched it lightly; 
it had heard from afar both the coming of the Armada 
and the fall of the Third Reich, and all Man's wars 
had passed it by.
Now it was gone, as though it had never been. In a 
moment of time the toil and treasure of centuries had 
been swept away. The vanished streets could still be 
traced as faint marks in the vitrified ground, but of the 
houses, nothing remained. Steel and concrete, plaster 
and ancient oak - it had mattered little at the end. In 
the moment of death they had stood together, transfixed 
by the glare of the detonating bomb. Then, 
even before they could flash into fire, the blast waves 
had reached them and they had ceased to be. Mile 
upon mile the ravening hemisphere of flame had expanded 
over the level farmlands, and from its heart 
had risen the twisting totem-pole that had haunted the 
minds of men for so long, and to such little purpose. 
The rocket had been a stray, one of the last ever to 
be fired. It was hard to say for what target it had been 
intended. Certainty not London, for London was no 
longer a military objective. London, indeed, was no 
longer anything at all. Long ago the men whose duty it 
was had calculated that three of the hydrogen bombs 
would be sufficient for that rather small target. In 
sending twenty they had been perhaps a little 
overzealous.
This was not one of the twenty that had done their 
work so well. Both its destination and its origin were
unknown: whether it had come across the lonely 
Arctic wastes or far above the waters of the Atlantic, 
no one could tell and there were few now who cared. 
Once there had been men who had known such things, 
who had watched from afar the flight of the great projectiles 
and had sent their own missiles to meet them. 
Often that appointment had been kept, high above the 
Earth where the sky was black and sun and stars shared 
the heavens together. Then there had bloomed for a 
moment that indescribable flame, sending out into 
space a message that in centuries to come other eyes 
than Man's would see and understand.
But that had been days ago, at the beginning of the 
War. The defenders had long since been brushed aside, 
as they had known they must be. They had held on to 
life long enough to discharge their duty; too late, the 
enemy had learned his mistake. He would launch no 
further rockets; those still falling he had dispatched 
hours ago on secret trajectories that had taken them 
far out into space. They were returning now unguided 
and inert, waiting in vain for the signals that should 
lead them to their destinies. One by one they were 
Falling at random upon a world which they could harm 
no more.
The river had already overflowed its banks; somewhere 
down its course the land had twisted beneath 
that colossal hammer-blow and the way to the sea was 
no longer open. Dust was still falling in a fine rain, as 
it would do for days as Man's cities and treasures returned 
to the world that had given them birth. But 
the sky was no longer wholly darkened, and in the west 
the sun was settling through banks of angry cloud.
A church had stood here by the river's edge, and 
though no trace of the building remained, the grave-
stones that the years had gathered round it still marked 
its place. Now the stone slabs lay in parallel rows, 
snapped off at their bases and pointing mutely along 
the line of the blast. Some were half flattened into the 
ground, others had been cracked and blistered by
terrific heat, but many still bore the messages they had 
carried down the centuries in vain.
The light died in the west and the unnatural crimson 
faded from the sky. Yet still the graven words could 
be clearly read, lit by a steady, unwavering radiance, 
too faint to be seen by day but strong enough to banish 
night. The land was burning: for miles the glow of its 
radio-activity was reflected from the clouds. Through 
the glimmering landscape wound the dark ribbon of 
the steadily widening river, and as the waters submerged 
the land that deadly glow continued unchanging 
in the depths. In a generation, perhaps, it would 
have faded from sight, but a hundred years might pass 
before life could safely come this way again.
Timidly the waters touched the worn gravestone 
that for more than three hundred years had lain before 
the vanished altar. The church that had sheltered it 
so long had given it some protection at the last, and 
only a slight discoloration of the rock told of the fires 
that had passed this way. In the corpse-light of the 
dying land, the archaic words could still be traced as 
the water rose around them, breaking at last in tiny 
ripples across the stone. Line by line the epitaph upon 
which so many millions had gazed slipped beneath the 
conquering waters. For a little while the letters could 
still be faintly seen; then they were gone forever.

Good frend for Iesvs sake forbeare, 
To digg the dvst encloased heare
Blest be ye man yt spares thes stones, 
And cvrst be he yt moves my bones.

Undisturbed through all eternity the poet could 
sleep in safety now: in the silence and darkness above 
his head, the Avon was seeking its new outlet to the 
sea.


Arthur C. Clarke,  1953

    Source: geocities.com/markus_petz