Poetry |

“The Venus Flytrap (Dionaea Muscipula)” and “National Park”

The Venus Flytrap (Dionaea Muscipula)

for Phoebe Judge

 

Everything is hungry,

And the radius of

Viability is

Closing. Sixty miles,

For now. Inside the Green

Swamp Preserve, longleaf pine

Trees stake down the savannah.

Underbrush in need of

Fire and balanced economies.

 

Venus flytraps were full of

Spiders. Arthur Dobbs called

Them “Iron-spring fox traps”

In the first recorded

Naming. Poached and packed in

Egg cartons, sold for a dime

By the thousands to feed

A bogus cure for cancer.

Everything is hungry.

 

We found, perhaps, one small

Bud along the trail. Ten

Years ago, the floor was covered

With enough to eat you

Alive, if they were so

Inclined. Are we worth eating

All of them? We name and

Call it ours. Oh mother

Of beauty, have we not yet

Multiplied enough?

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

National Park

 

Big Woods: 1,563mi2. Straddling a portion of the original sites

of Yosemite National Park and Sierra National Forest.

 

 

People vacation here for the oxygen. To stimulate the green receptors in their eyes. The lottery, if you’re lucky, lets you visit once, and then only for one day. The queue to enter is years’ long.

I went to find the Jesus of the bears because if he is anywhere, he’s here — this warehouse of our nicest things. The only patch attrition left to us.

His ursine siblings stripped him of his claws and forced him over the falls. He rose again from the rainbow and the foam, sharper than ever to terrorize the fish and the berry, at least within these few cordoned miles.

Green is a wavelength so rare now as to be the voice of God that no one hears anymore. I want an animal savior, want to slough humanity like a fur coat from my shoulders.

Was it sacrifice for us to mechanize the country but this solitary place?

Here is the basket, here are the eggs. Walled for its protection. But the fires glom more and more, and the barricades won’t hold. Computers scrub the air, but our thinking was always an upside-down parasol. We planned for the worst we could think of and that was our mistake, because we aren’t very bright. There is so much worse we can’t think of.

Perhaps my god should have been a sequoia. The fire bursts its cones and phoenixes new life. Whose forgiveness should we seek but that of the earth we ask to accept us when we die?

Contributor
Jason Gray

Jason Gray is the author of Radiation King (Lost Horse Press, 2019), awarded the Idaho Prize for Poetry, and Photographing Eden (Ohio University Press, 2009), as well as two chapbooks, How to Paint the Savior Dead and Adam & Eve Go to the Zoo. His poems and reviews have been featured in Poetry, Kenyon Review, American Poetry Review, Image, The Southern Review, and elsewhere.

Posted in Poetry

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