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Description My salt marsh
--mine, I call it, because
these day-hammered fields
of dazzled horizontals
undulate, summers,
inside me and out--
how can I say what it is?
Sea lavender shivers
over the tidewater steel.
A million minnows ally
with their million shadows
(lucky we'll never need
to know whose is whose).
The bud of storm loosens:
watered paint poured
dark blue onto the edge
of the page. Haloed grasses,
gilt shadow-edged body of dune. . .
I could go on like this.
I love the language
of the day's ten thousand aspects,
the creases and flecks
in the map, these
brilliant gouaches.
But I'm not so sure it's true,
what I was taught, that through
the particular's the way
to the universal:
what I need to tell is
swell and curve, shift
and blur of boundary,
tremble and spilling over,
a heady purity distilled
from detail. A metaphor, then:
in this tourist town,
the retail legions purvey
the far-flung world's
bangles: brilliance of Nepal
and Mozambique, any place
where cheap labor braids
or burnishes or hammers
found stuff into jewelry's
lush grammar,
a whole vocabulary
of ornament: copper and lacquer,
shells and seeds from backwaters
with fragrant names, millefiori
milled into African beads, Mexican abalone,
camelbone and tin, cinnabar
and verdigris, silver,
black onyx, coral,
gold: one vast conjugation
of the verb
to shine.
And that
is the marsh essence--
all the hoarded riches
of the world held
and rivering, a gleam
awakened and doubled
by water, flashing
off the bowing of the grass.
Jewelry, tides, language:
things that shine.
What is description, after all,
but encoded desire?
And if we say
the marsh, if we forge
terms for it, then isn't it
contained in us,
a little,
the brightness? <
Four Cut Sunflowers, One Upside Down Turbulent stasis on a blue ground.
What is any art but static flame?
Fire of spun gold, grain.
This brilliant flickering's
arrested by named (Naples,
chrome, cadmium) and nameless
yellows, tawny golds. Look
at the ochre sprawl--how
they sprawl, these odalisques,
withering coronas
around the seedheads' intricate precision.
Even drying, the petals curling
into licks of fire,
they're haloed in the pure rush of light
yellow is. One theory of color,
before Newton broke the world
through the prism's planes
and nailed the primaries to the wheel,
posited that everything's made of yellow
and blue--coastal colors
which engender, in their coupling,
every other hue, so that the world's
an elaborated dialogue
between citron and Prussian blue.
They are a whole summer to themselves.
They are a nocturne
in argent and gold, and they burn
with the ferocity
of dying (which is to say, the luminosity
of what's living hardest). Is it a human soul