What will it do for him, to have internalised
The many slender stems of riverlets and funnels,
The blunt toes of the pine cone fallen, to have ingested
Lakes in gold slabs at dawn and the peaked branches
Of the fir under snow? He has taken into himself
The mist of the hazelnut, the white hairs of the moth
And the mole’s velvet snout. He remembers, by inner
Voice alone, fogs over frozen grey marshes, fine
Salt on the blunt of the cliff.
What will it mean to him to perceive things
First from within—the mushroom’s fold, the martin’s
Tongue, the spotted orange of the wallaby’s ear,
To become the object himself before he comprehends it,
Putting into perfect concept without experience
The din of the green gulley in spring mosses?
And when he stretches on his great bed and closes his
eyes,
What patterns will appear to him naturally–the schematic
Tracings of the Vanessa butterfly in migration, tacks
And red strings marking the path of each mouse
In the field, nucleic chromosomes aligning their cylinders
In purple before their separation? The wind must settle
All that it carries behind his face and rise again
In his vision like morning.
A giant has swallowed the earth for a pill.
And when he sleeps now, o when he sleeps,
How his eyelids murmur, how we envy his dream.
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