Categories: Poetry

Icarus at Lake Acworth

In Breughel’s Icarus, for instance: how everything turns away
Quite leisurely from the disaster…

—W.H. Auden

Waterlogged and barely floating
in a cove of Lake Acworth,
a dead blue heron draws flies,
bobs in the wake of a bass boat.
Its wings expand in the sludge,
fill with the water beneath them,
spread over the rest of its body
that rots among cattails and reeds,
feeds creatures I cannot see.
From the bridge where I walk
with my children, the wingspan
appears out of place, worn
by some exiled angel, or a boy
who took flight only to fall,
drown in this lake, drift to this inlet
where no one seems to notice.
Motor oil laps the heron’s feathers,
gathers with bottles, plastic wrappers,
fishing line at the reservoir’s edge.
Days from now, even these wings
will descend to silt, decompose,
dissolve into all that remains,
recede in the relics of our own myths.

Alli

Share
Published by
Alli

Recent Posts

Introduction

In this 28th edition of Waccamaw, the Nigerian poet Fasasi Abdulrosheed Oladipupo unpacks the meaning…

5 months ago

Masthead 28

[wc_row] [wc_column size="one-half" position="first"] Editorial Team Nonfiction Editor: Amy Singleton Poetry Editor: Brittany Davis Poetry…

5 months ago

S.C. Creative Sociology Writing Competition

The S.C. Creative Sociology Writing Competition invited undergraduate and graduate students from any discipline in…

5 months ago

SELF-PORTRAIT AS A MUSEUM

Museum: a depository of grief displayed aesthetically; I carry the mishaps of things I want…

5 months ago

Dietary Positivism For Dinner

It is well with my soul. It is well like a soup.

5 months ago

How do you say the knife is blunt in Yorùbá?

we say the knife is dead, or the mouth of the knife is dead because…

5 months ago

This website uses cookies.