The prose poetry book titled “Buhûrdan” by Mehmet Behçet Yazar, published in 1925 by Matbaa-i Ahmed İhsân and Şürekası, is important in that it contains history, geography, and myths within the poetic geography of Asia. Mehmet Behçet Yazar, who conveys the history, geographical features, mythological, religious, and cultural archaic structure of the Asian continent with a poetic style, makes references to the history, art, and living peoples of the geography from his own time. In this study, the referents and existential world of the prose poem “Asya” will be revealed by examining the poetic text on the axis of the subject and the recipient reader. The work describes Asia, where the concept of the “Middle East” did not yet exist, written with the possibilities of prose poetry by a poet who witnessed the transition from Empire to Republic, with the grammatical scope of its internal structure and the myths of existence indicated by its layers of meaning. In this study, the sense of belonging and the trace of collective memory formed by the cultural codes of geography will be revealed from the perspective of an artist living in the Ottoman Empire, who was among the Asian peoples, and the semantic world of the text will be examined with a holistic approach.