The Hagfish Await
By Matt Bernier
Sorry for the inconvenience, but I think
you should know that the hagfish await,
right whale carcass bobbing for days with
the buoyancy of the ship that struck her,
afloat with last gasps of salty air and
gas from tons of undigested zooplankton
as containers head to port in diesel fogs;
whale’s belly rolls skyward as the sun rises,
summons winds from corners of the Atlantic;
the unreflective ship calmly hosting a wake,
hull as stony and gray as granite island cliffs,
unyielding, not even a sobbing rain to stream
down cheeks of deckhands as paid mourners;
another day, another hit in a vast conspiracy,
the dark slate wings of skates below flapping
like godfathers’ overcoats in seaside winds;
a great white shark delivers prayers and the
whale falls, wailing seabirds depart the mass
and the hagfish get to work, rasping away
evidence of a crime, spineless nervous systems
a few million years older than thought itself,
not pondering the tragedy of huge, stilled heart
and empty jail of skeleton, justice unfulfilled,
docked ship unburdened of our guilty pleasures.