On Seeing an Exhibition of Rudolf and Leopold
Blaschka's Glass Marine Invertebrates
1.
From Bohemia to the deep:
filament, tentacle crown, the creep
toward clarity of ultramarine,
the eyelid-purple in-between
of a fringed lamp—what is it?—
floating in the case as if lit
from within. Radiolaria
needle the air. Carinaria
hangs in dotted swiss.
The octopus gazes toward us
beyond the glass.
2.
There is no feeling of wetness
when one is below the surface,
wrote Zarh Pritchard, who dove
and held his breath to sketch
on oiled paper dim veils
and shadows, coral
sediments, fronds,
the undulating pastel
haze of weeds and creatures,
his pale hands quick
with the crayon,
everything shifting
in slow light,
everything old, new,
everything new, dissolving.
3.
There is a feeling of dryness
when one is strolling
instead of flowing
through a museum—
a feeling that time is being
hurried along,
there are too many corners,
there is no depth—
though anemones wave
and jellyfish rise
like lungs in darkened boxes.
ξ
Deirdre O'Connor directs the Writing Center at Bucknell University, where she also serves as Associate Director of the Bucknell Seminar for Undergraduate Poets. Her book, Before the Blue Hour, received the Cleveland State Poetry Prize, and her work has appeared recently in Cave Wall, Crazyhorse, and Really System. She has a new, book-length manuscript titled The Cupped Field.