For Elliott Coleman
The bison, or tiger, or whatever beast
hunting or hunted, and the twiggy hunter
with legs and spear, in the still caves of Spain
wore out the million rains of summer
and the mean mists of winter:
the frightening motion of the hunter-priest
who straight in the instant between blood and breath
saw frozen there not shank or horn or hide
but an arrangement of these by him, and he himself
there with them, watched by himself inside
the terrible functionless whole
in an offering strange as some new kind of death.
The thick gross early form that made a grave
said in one gesture, “neither bird nor leaf.”
The news no animal need bear was out:
the knowledge of death, and time the wicked thief,
and the prompt monster of foreseeable grief:
it was the tentative gesture that he gave.
Our hulking confr
(Josephine Jacobsen)
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Based on Topics: Death & Dying Poems, Wisdom & Knowledge Poems, Summer Poems, Grief Poems, Winter Poems, Media & News PoemsBased on Keywords: shank, elliott, hulking, coleman, twiggy, functionless