Friday, October 5, 2012

Poem of the Week

Difference

The jellyfish
float in the bay shallows
like schools of clouds,

a dozen identical — is it right
to call them creatures,
these elaborate sacks

of nothing? All they seem
is shape, and shifting,
and though a whole troop

of undulant cousins
go about their business
within a single wave's span,

every one does something unlike:
this one a balloon
open on both ends

but swollen to its full expanse,
this one a breathing heart,
this a pulsing flower.

This one a rolled condom,
or a plastic purse swallowing itself,
that one a Tiffany shade,

this a troubled parasol.
This submarine opera's
all subterfuge and disguise,

its plot a fabulous tangle
of hiding and recognition:
nothing but trope,

nothing but something
forming itself into figures
then refiguring,

sheer ectoplasm
recognizable only as the stuff
of metaphor. What can words do

but link what we know
to what we don't,
and so form a shape?

Which shrinks or swells,
configures or collapses, blooms
even as it is described

into some unlikely
marine chiffon:
a gown for Isadora?

Nothing but style.
What binds
one shape to another

also sets them apart
— but what's lovelier
than the shapeshifting

transparence of like and as:
clear, undulant words?
We look at alien grace,

unfettered
by any determined form,
and we say: balloon, flower,

heart, condom, opera,
lampshade, parasol, ballet.
Hear how the mouth,

so full
of longing for the world,
changes its shape?

***

Since I wrote about a Mark Doty book earlier this week, I thought I'd put one of his poems up here, too.

The most prolific poets write, not because they have some dark emotional secrets that need to be let out into the dimly-lit corners of their closets. That's why teenagers write poetry. Poets write because they love their language, and they love their world. Doty's poem here reflects both of those loves simultaneously.


1 comment:

Torrie said...

"...What can words do

but link what we know
to what we don't,
and so form a shape?"


I just love this so much. In fact, I love it so much I might even share it with my middle school creative writing class.

Those particular lines, that is.

Not the condom parts :)