mickjagger

Out of context: Reply #382

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    The Bear

    1
    In late winter
    I sometimes glimpse bits of steam
    coming up from
    some fault in the old snow
    and bend close and see it is lung-colored
    and put down my nose
    and know
    the chilly, enduring odor of bear.

    2
    I take a wolf's rib and whittle
    it sharp at both ends
    and coil it up
    and freeze it in blubber and place it out
    on the fairway of the bears.

    And when it has vanished
    I move out on the bear tracks,
    roaming in circles
    until I come to the first, tentative, dark
    splash on the earth.

    And I set out
    running, following the splashes
    of blood wandering over the world.
    At the cut, gashed resting places
    I stop and rest,
    at the crawl-marks
    where he lay out on his belly
    to overpass some stretch of bauchy ice
    I lie out
    dragging myself forward with bear-knives in my fists.

    3
    On the third day I begin to starve,
    at nightfall I bend down as I knew I would
    at a turd sopped in blood,
    and hesitate, and pick it up,
    and thrust it in my mouth, and gnash it down,
    and rise
    and go on running.

    4
    On the seventh day,
    living by now on bear blood alone,
    I can see his upturned carcass far out ahead, a scraggled,
    steamy hulk,
    the heavy fur riffling in the wind.

    I come up to him
    and stare at the narrow-spaced, petty eyes,
    the dismayed
    face laid back on the shoulder, the nostrils
    flared, catching
    perhaps the first taint of me as he
    died.

    I hack
    a ravine in his thigh, and eat and drink,
    and tear him down his whole length
    and open him and climb in
    and close him up after me, against the wind,
    and sleep.

    5
    And dream
    of lumbering flatfooted
    over the tundra,
    stabbed twice from within,
    splattering a trail behind me,
    splattering it out no matter which way I lurch,
    no matter which parabola of bear-transcendence,
    which dance of solitude I attempt,
    which gravity-clutched leap,
    which trudge, which groan.

    6
    Until one day I totter and fall --
    fall on this
    stomach that has tried so hard to keep up,
    to digest the blood as it leaked in,
    to break up
    and digest the bone itself: and now the breeze
    blows over me, blows off
    the hideous belches of ill-digested bear blood
    and rotted stomach
    and the ordinary, wretched odor of bear,

    blows across
    my sore, lolled tongue a song
    or screech, until I think I must rise up
    and dance. And I lie still.

    7
    I awaken I think. Marshlights
    reappear, geese
    come trailing again up the flyway.
    In her ravine under old snow the dam-bear
    lies, licking
    lumps of smeared fur
    and drizzly eyes into shapes
    with her tongue. And one
    hairy-soled trudge stuck out before me,
    the next groaned out,
    the next,
    the next,
    the rest of my days I spend
    wandering: wondering
    what, anyway,
    was that sticky infusion, that rank flavor of blood, that
    poetry, by which I lived?

    from Body Rags, Galway Kinnell (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1967).

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