August 13, 2020
449: Soft-Bodied Animals Leave Few Traces
August 13, 2020
449: Soft-Bodied Animals Leave Few Traces
Soft-Bodied Animals Leave Few Traces
by Mitchell Jacobs
in the fossil record. Millennia of sea anemones lost, their ghost lineages as branched as their tender, unkeepable bodies. We remember bone, tooth, shell, chitinous exoskeleton. The hard parts. Whatever’s stiff enough to displace mud. A spine’s archipelago. I bend over in this Utah heat, feeling the earth’s vendetta against flesh, which it punishes and punishes then decomposes. I unstrap my tools, trowel or brush, to use as the rock dictates. I had imagined grief to be the trilobite, many-segmented and ubiquitous. Extinction’s logo. They are shrines from the tough earth to its fierce loves more mineral than animal. Where is the tilde of an earthworm that tilled the soil with its entire innards? A squid’s roving, buoyant eyeball? The earth will save my hunched skeleton but not the tapeworm that squirms inside me of its own volition: delicate ribbon as long and tangled as hunger. Or joy.
"Soft-Bodied Animals Leave Few Traces" by Mitchell Jacobs. Used by permission of the poet.