Hex Season

Hexagenia limbata

 

It is more than our minds can handle:

finding at the end of all meadows

a mandible, sunwashed and wordless.

Or, say, the centipede—little ladder

plumbing the dead stump’s cellar,

and how down there we imagined

we might not miss the bright city,

the impulse to speak to another.

                              Over time

we have been turned like venison

on a spit, the revolutions affording

us a sometime star or two. I look

now, love, to the brook trout pond

where a thousand mayflies lay

eggs that will sink to the bottom.

If we hold our ears still enough,

we may hear the earliest words

form in the unborn mouthparts.


Also by Alex Tretbar

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