The Innisfree Poetry Journal
www.innisfreepoetry.org
by Claire Crabtree
PRIMORDIAL Here among sea creatures No tenderness, Just propagation. We arrive this May To find the horseshoe crabs Climbing each other’s Hard shells, silent, purposeful.
They leave pools of larvae to serve the sea birds, While clams and crabs rise in beaks, Are dropped to crash on the jetties For a swooping delectation.
The horseshoes, earthbound, unexpressive as German helmets, When overturned, will wave their eight legs, pincers, horrible to us: Creatures meant to crawl.
True, as a girl I found a tiny horseshoe shell Not ground by change of tides: It sat transparent on my desk Till I grew up, forgot.
These days, even the children don’t walk barefoot, We worry about erosion, and Hardly acknowledge the primordial-- Barnacled, unlovely, They are simply There on the beach, dying or mating In their strange circles Alive, ongoing Outliving us.
AT THE PEASANT MUSEUM, BUCHAREST
Into this place, the people came— A wooden structure at the edge of the village— Near the village of the dead. Humble and bundled against the cold. The women wait patient In the wool aprons of their region; The priest sings The tabernacle distant, blinding with candles. They stand two hours, No one thinking of pews, of rest.
Now, a gift of the village, It fits inside the museum building, Even the wooden spire.
Entering, with faded paintings On raw boards around us, By no skilled hand anyway, That likely showed the infidels In the river of Hell, No women saints but Mary, As in the monasteries near Suceava, We are drawn into its center As particles to a magnet, As snow flakes to an upturned face.
We wish never to leave To stand here untiring Within the building within the Museo Tzaranului Along the city’s long boulevards As if whatever remains In the wood Or the space it encloses Is haunted Or hallowed.
Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication
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