Poetry |

“The Coming of the Jellyfish”

The Coming of the Jellyfish 

 

When all the fish are finished

flexing on the deck

and the sea grass has been chewed

down by black spike sea

urchins set like slow

motion demolition charges

strung along skyscrapers,

the jellyfish show up

to cruise the graygreen barrens.

All petticoats and no legs,

translucent parachutes

descending then feinting

away from their descent,

they trail half a dozen

fallen power lines

ready to whip sparks

off the skin of anyone

who dares cup the swell

of their milkless breasts.

After all our feeding frenzy, this

serenity; after all our

overfishing, this fleshiness

on which we cannot feed.

They leech a little color

off any passing light,

like water, or like ghosts

arriving to haunt water

where everything that lived

has died before its time.

Don’t let them fool you

with the lazy, sighing

way their bodies move

in on new territory.

Under a hundred

such umbrellas

the apocalypse

saunters to work.

Contributor
Amit Majmudar

Amit Majmudar is a novelist, poet, translator, essayist, and diagnostic nuclear radiologist. His latest books are Godsong: A Verse Translation of the Bhagavad-Gita, with Commentary (Knopf/Penguin Random House India, 2018) and the historical novel Soar (Penguin Random House India, 2020). His new and fourth poetry collection in the United States is What He Did in Solitary (Knopf, 2020).

Posted in Poetry

One comment on ““The Coming of the Jellyfish”

  1. The poem begins with what seems to be an ordinary fishing incident; and then, as quietly and subtly as drifting jellyfish, it broadens out, sweeping the reader along with beautiful and terrifying imagery. I remember reading an article about the proliferation of jellyfish in the oceans as a result of human interference. This is every zombie or alien invasion movie made real. This is your nightmare happening right now.

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