The Poet Goes Fishing
Tonight I am fishing
in my rough bark
on the black sea.
I am reeling in the net:
that is full of babies,
heads' hair fine like black faun's fur
with white twitching
arms and legs.
The skin on their torsos
vaguely translucent,
I can see their hearts beating
like furious cuts of meat.
They are crying like newborns,
splashing like frightened seatrout.
How will I know
which one to keep?
I can't eat them all.
As I ponder this
one falls in the boat
like a wet sponge.
It smells of fish and brine,
its tiny white chest heaving:
it's still learning
how to breathe.
Perhaps it is learning
how to cry for its mother
who lives in the depths
where the sun can't go.
I will keep this one then.
It will be tasty, I think,
with lemon juice and tartar,
perhaps a buttered slice
of honey wheat bread
as well.
And as I ponder
how poets eat their young
I throw the rest back.
With a splash
they swim away
going down,
diving deep like seabass
where the dark
maternal shapes
move like mountains.
- Mr. Moribund's blog
- Login or register to post comments
- 185 reads
"A Modest Proposal"
Immediately, Jonathan Swift's satire "A Modest Proposal" comes to mind - a political discourse on the Irish-English "disconnection". Children, baked, boiled or fried make a fine peace treaty for adult wars.
Love this "waterworld" imagery mirror of Swift's more "earthy" world.
Smiles and Light
AuraGem
Yeah, I kinda had that in
Yeah, I kinda had that in mind (way back there somewhere, in a long unopened drawer.) Plus it's fun to write stuff that feels like a waking dream. That and I have my more "twisted" moments.
Also I have a thing for water imagery. And the Moon. Don't get me started on the Moon.
Glad you enjoyed it. Not enough good commentary going on here these days and the forum leans too heavily in favor of craft at the expense of... well, soul (and I know it's a tough line, but still... poetry is more than mere craft.) Anyhoo, I really do appreciate it.
I owe you a few reads. I'll get to it here soon. I promise:)
Peace,
Jon-Paul
Some few in that, but Numbers err in this,
Ten Censure wrong for one who Writes amiss;
A Fool might once himself alone expose,
Now One in Verse makes many more in Prose.
-- Alexander Pope