BPR 48 | 2021
The yew’s needles, that mish-mash
 of pound signs and hash marks,
 tagging who knows who,
have snagged a small web:
 hammock the eye can ride,
 cloud snit, snow thistle.
The no-see-ums dot
 the web and the air 
 around me, little eaters
who nip my bud, 
 whatever that might be: 
 a wing, a tooth, a brood
of worries. Oh small-blooded
 ones, we’re kin; 
 now I won’t quit you though I can’t
requite you. You mob 
 the red and black salt box
 whose white ate the snow’s
last year. Abandoned,
 it bulges, a rock of salt, a block
 assault on neat and put away
It memorializes 
 our lackadaisical 
 forget-and-don’t-look—
like Lot’s wife, whose
 looking at the ruined
 forbidden city astonished her
into salt. Why salt? 
 I bet she wept:
 her whole damned body
became tears’
 indifferent residue.
 The weird logic
of metamorphosis:
 by god: Medusa’s beauty 
 earns her a coif of snakes:
here and now, chorus
 of keening, a siren 
 and a black and white hound
actually called Carol—
 the two ululations 
 braid and rise so high
they hurt to hear. 
 Is it consoling 
 that earth metamorphoses
minerals, charges, urges, maybe
 soul, and salts it away
 into place?
The yew tags us all, 
 or will. The mystery
 that luck or providence has wrought
is that wary and aware
 even are, when witness turns 
 to tears, salt, stone.



