Vantage
From where I watch, there are no highest leaves, no leaves that don’t have over them more leaves impeding what they open up and out for, darkening downward as they feed on green diminishments, as if dark, if it still can darken, could be itself the light the darker leaves beneath are hungry for. From where I watch even the shade hungers And is hungered after—all along the chain past bark, root, leaf, ghost speck of leaf, microbial scrapings, and beyond them, flakes chipped off of flakes off of a now- no-longer anything sucked dry, unsifted and unsiftable into so fine a green even the dark shines through. What’s hunger but a hole to fill, gravity of a self- consuming self-proliferating blind and densely tangled maze of this from that, from this, somewhere inside of which a cry for mercy isn’t heard, or is, and the jaws shut, and the very dirt becomes the dirt of it.
Credit
Copyright © 2014 by Alan Shapiro. Used with permission of the author. This poem appeared in Poem-a-Day on April 21, 2014. Browse the Poem-a-Day archive.
About this Poem
“‘Vantage’ is a poem about leaves jockeying with each other for whatever light there is in a rather dense understory. The poem within the poem, so to speak, is about the hunger of all living things to perpetuate themselves, at every level, at any cost.” —Alan Shapiro
Date Published
04/21/2014