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    Anatomically Incorrect Sketches of Marine Animals

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    ally Incorrect Sketches of Marine Animals

      By Sarah Dawson

      Author of Poetry After Ink

      Copyright 2011 Sarah Dawson

      Table of Contents

      Barceloneta, May 2010

      Observed on a Zante beach, 2002

      Anemones

      Reedmace

      Lug worms, rag worms

      Hastings Beach, 1992

      Our Eroding Coastline

      Warp awaits weft

      Boring Sponge

      Shadow Catchers Introduction

      Korperfotogramm

      River Taw (ice), February 1997

      Out of Shot

      Vessel No.3

      Body Dissolutions

      Barceloneta, May 2010

      You were miming breaststroke – the universal

      sign for swimming. Found the beach, whilst I was

      watching silken laundry sea that lapped the

      pillars. Beneath, fish were sewn from thousands

      of silk scraps – seams that faced out, unhemmed

      loose threads, labels, that you ached to cut

      they brushed each other; coats they ached to shrug off

      Observed on a Zante beach, 2002

      1.

      Where vessels branch, the delta of my left foot’s swollen -

      skin’s a membrane just enclosing liquid; cells stretched

      to accommodate my warm blood. Unlike pastel hued

      line drawings, showing cross sections of skin – a corner

      turned up to reveal the dermis – flesh seems rich

      in colour, more in flux. I press the swollen veins

      which flatten, dark blood backing up, until released.

      This pool of me won’t stagnate, stranded halfway

      up the beach; I run down through the grains, like tidal

      water drawn to sea.

      2.

      Plastic bit between my teeth; I concentrate on holding

      my head vertical, and parallel to temperamental

      waves. My mind drifts, water slips – the salt that lights a pathway

      through me – does it burn the gills of fish? And do their tightly sewn

      blue sequins chafe with sweat? How do they rub sharp particles

      from eye ducts, clear their throats? The sea is thick with needling

      phytoplankton, stirring shoal momentum, force made up

      of flickers.

      Anemones

      1.

      Downpours spring the moths from shower curtains, settle

      on my naked belly. Damp, they can be flicked away,

      they land as detritus, around my island,

      cast in porcelain. I will admit that

      in my arrogance, I want to live alone,

      the only moving, noise creating thing inside

      this sealed off space. I hate the roaches congregating

      for their cigarettes behind the basin.

      In this absence of air vents, or windows, dampness clings

      to surfaces, as if a sea-carved cave at low tide.

      2.

      On Maenporth beach, as children, we’d awaken

      each anemone, asleep under a film of dampness

      in its granite cave. We’d goad them to react.

      Our flat was poised above the sea. Before sleeping

      I’d have to check inside each stiff oak drawer; each space

      belonging too much to itself – or to someone who walked

      quite comfortably below those too-low ceilings.

      I would dream I woke, and checking on each drawer

      again, I’d find a key. I’ve drafted many plots from there.

      3.

      His hairs accumulate in dunes behind the cistern.

      Late at night, I check for roaches there, in tile gaps,

      blackened by the mould. A single placid polyp

      clings there. Cupping water in my hands I douse him,

      blind limbs tumble out. ‘He’ll catch the moths that wake me,

      landing on my sleeping face’, I think, but soon

      anemones spread over your decaying grout, impinge

      upon my island, tug my fine hairs as I shower.

      Reedmace

      Squinting through wire mesh

      at densely packed reedmace stalks,

      long leaves peeling off

      to dance; subterfuge.

      Imitation marshland, just

      a clump bordering

      scrub, but imagine

      the richness: tits and finches,

      form a chattering heart

      that splinters.

      Later, reconvenes

      emboldened by the sturdy

      reedmace heads, in bloom

      though looking austere

      not like flowers should. Like tame

      deer who’d allow you

      close enough to run

      their antlers through your hands. But

      they’ll implode soon; arms

      pierce through them, tumble

      out, pathetic reaching limbs

      that try to hang on

      air, but grasping, fall,

      accumulate, leave quiet stalks.

      Lug worms, rag worms

      Bristle worms frayed threads antagonize each other;

      uglier earthworms you’ve plucked from their burrows.

      The bristle worms burrow round u-shaped bends – uglier

      earthworms. You’re sifting for sediment cast off;

      the bristle worm’s burrow. Round u-shape bends, worms suck down

      then strain the sediment. You cast off, lifting

      your iron spade, sand the worm sucks down. You strain

      through the sediment, gradually shifting the coarse sand

      with your iron spade. Sand’s abandoned in heaps across the beach.

      Shifting the coarse sand, you pluck the worm out

      of its burrow, abandoned in heaps across the beach. Plucked from

      our burrows, now exposed, our frayed threads

      antagonize each other.

      Hastings Beach, 1992

      Our beach house rode up on the tide at night;

      when it was lain down, old, cheap carpet ridged

      in stiff peaks, it seemed strange that the cabbage-like

      sea kale and shrubs spouting hard grapes had stayed

      anchored. I laid down inside, my cheek pressed

      against the white, painted wood; willed the spring high tide

      up, over the rubble, coarse sand, and chipped

      limpet shells, beach glass, I wanted the water

      to rock me. To rush, retract, over coarse sand

      whilst the sea kale stayed anchored. I’d picture

      the groynes as the blades of a water wheel

      churning the beach glass and limpet shells outside.

      Our Eroding Coastline

      You read the rocks with crystals in were spherical, and lighter,

      so, a sorry sandstone, shrunken by the tide in each hand,

      judge. And hurl the lighter at a stack of granite, though

      your poor throw makes it seem to have its own trajectory

      - to split in segments – new faces to wear down – crystals

      absent. Think the sea is seeking something in the rocks too –

      massing back sand grains to blast the skree and slate. Too young

      a sculptor, scratching at the essence of his subject

      ‘til a stub remains. I loved to skirt the sea’s thin lip,

      slate ridge pressing the centre of my soles, testing handholds,

      each bay we’d pick apart the remnants, sea still in retreat

      irrevocably creeping back before you’ve weighed and smashed

    &
    nbsp; each likely rock. We’d have to climb the scree slope, digging nails

      into the dirt and clutching half set in slate pieces, holdings

      in the process of eroding. Clutch the crops of grass that mark

      the cliff’s edge, lined with pale pink thrift, pendulous roots

      Warp awaits weft

      so, you can catch a grasshopper, but not a ball? You press

      his lever and step back; a stop back prepared for the catch,

      though you can’t predict where in that clump he’ll spring from. Perhaps

      you can; he lands right inside your cupped hands, unlike

      tennis balls; they always bruise your torso. It shows

      how determined you are to isolate each source

      of buzzing sonar, bounced off you: an effort

      to track you down. You need distracting; I ask you

      to find me each different grass in the field; you oblige

      though you think any vertical stalk is a grass,

      so you bring me reeds, rushes, and sedges, a cluster

      of colour as rich as a medieval tapestry.

      Our bare calves engulfed by bristling tips of the melick

      and cats tail; the warp threads. An unused loom anxious

      for narrative; scarcely believable static scenes

      woven in. But this loom shakes in mild winds; we were kinder

      to dismantle it. Peel back each long ridged leaf, pick

      each kernel, pluck each grain, knot stalks and snap hollow

      tubes. The insidious grains, prematurely plucked,

      stuck to our palms; they were barbed.

      The unraveled field travels with us.

      Boring Sponge

      I apologise – you found

      my weakly beating cilia.

      Caught coercing nutrients

      towards my central cavity.

      Collide and apologise;

      headless colony of blind cells.

      We amend ourselves; shuffle

      towards our similar cousins.

      How did we build silica skeletons

      so complicated? How did our acid

      burrowing bore out our secret chambers?

      Grind us down and press us through a fine gauge

      sieve; us blind cells fumble, slowly re-arrange

      to form our primitive appendages.

      Shadow Catchers

      The following poems are inspired by the ‘Shadow Catchers’ exhibition of photograms, which took place at the V&A between October 2010 and February 2011. Photograms are made by placing items directly onto photographic paper and exposing them to light for a period of time. I specifically took inspiration from the following photograms…

      Untitled (Korperfotogramm, Munchen), 1965 by Floris Neususs

      River Taw (ice) 4 February, 1997 by Susan Derges

      Untitled, 2007 by Adam Fuss

      Vessel No. 3, 1995 by Susan Derges

      Body Dissolutions refers to a series of whole body photograms, similar to the one written about in Korperfotogramm, which were given to their subjects to destroy, by burying them, setting them alight, or flying them as kites until they broke down.

      All of the images above are available to view online, as well as biographical information about the artists. However, I hope that it is possible to enjoy the poems without this frame of reference.

      Korperfotogramm

      He warned me that you’d only care to see

      what I placed close to the surface. My bare skin;

      white, dimpled, veined, clung to the yet-to-be

      photo, my flesh spreading under my weight.

      His flashlight felt warm; I fought languor. It pinned

      me down, to the slide’s surface. My bare skin once

      made him recoil from positioning my limbs

      for photos; my flesh spreading under my weight.

      I was ‘trapped in the tadpole jar, gasping.’

      I made-pretend ‘til my burnt lungs complained.

      He didn’t recoil from positioning my limbs

      to fit his designs: ‘in a falling dream,’

      ‘trapped in the tadpole jar, gasping’.

      He told me to leap, higher, throw ink around,

      then dive deeper, dragging my light body down;

      I’d live out his designs.

      In my falling dreams,

      he’s using chemicals – altering my likeness.

      I try to leap, higher, pierce the airtight lid,

      rescue my vulnerable latent image;

      he warned me it’s all that you’d care to see.

      River Taw (ice), February 1997

      If there’s movement beneath

      the opaque ice window, then

      it's well hidden. Droplets draw in,

      contracting. Now they reflect until

      breached by feet; elusive stream slips

      underneath. My blank sheet -

      - my primitive camera - infiltrates

      beneath opaque ice windows.

      Droplets draw in through the seams

      of my gloves, testing me. Freeze the scene

      with a flash, but the stream slips past, shy

      as a mirror. My primitive camera

      misses it; captures opaque ice

      windows behind. Detailed patterns

      of fissures reflect the constricted

      landscape; fields like sheets of ice.

      If there’s melting beneath,

      it’s well hidden.

      Out of Shot

      an albino, a milksnake; memory

      of bolder relatives… just let him go

      or else he’ll fall through fingers

      you’ll be left holding

      a sheath of skin. Grasping

      his pastel bands… you have no place

      to, like thumbing though strangers’ faded

      photographs. Shed his sheath of skin

      today; first pierced, then rolled the shoulders

      every shrug revealing several rows

      of new, reflective scales. His

      slumped sheaths catch my darkroom’s

      low red lights, like stained glass

      windows; opaque. Skin

      speaks tactile languages, preserving

      textures. Muscles, teeth, intestines

      are elsewhere. Bathing, he sheds

      the water molecules, nervous

      to close behind him. Trying to capture

      him with clumsy apparatus; light

      and paper. Scaled flesh

      out of shot; a ripple flicked

      suggests his presence.

      Light lolls in new liquid valleys

      cast off in his wake. Intricate patterns

      that I capture; his shed skin.

      Vessel No.3

      this chain of spheres that slips

      between my thumb and finger’s undersides

      they could be globes, or atoms,

      nuclei inside unknowable.

      Squeeze softly; the fluid bulges, rushing

      to conserve its nuclei -

      I pause, mustn’t press further.

      Far from bilious clouds of frogspawn

      tangled chains of toads whose links

      disintegrate. Tadpoles still

      ill defined, flanks fading out

      to fluid. Every embryo

      is growing limbs to push it’s brothers

      back. Interested light stares,

      printing shadow nuclei

      onto the river bed. A print unfettered;

      spheres that slip away, vanish

      like early photographs.

      Body Dissolutions

      Clutching my own image with awkward

      handholds; arm above shoulder aching,

      pressing my image against the wind,

      it bends submissively, forgiving clammy thumbs

      and dulling prints. Bends become folds in gusts,

      reversed in wind’s tight turns, they tear

      inlets in toes, elbows, thighs.

      Trampling up dunes,

      how ca
    n the slender grasses hold

      the sand down, do they whip it back?

      They should be whipping harder. Near enough

      the peak, I try to tear a hole for kite string, can’t,

      just scratch the sleek surface of shadow toes, so

      crumple a corner, tie a tight knot around

      my not quite diamond portrait. Held aloft

      on fingertips, wind hunches, takes it on

      his back. The string runs through my relaxed hand

     
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