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Sunday, August 16, 2015

Jeffrey Harrison: "To a Snake"

















I knew you were not poisonous
when I saw you in the side garden;
even your name—milk snake—
sounds harmless, and yet your pattern
of copper splotches outlined in black
frightened me, and the way you were
curled in loops; and it offended me
that you were so close to the house
and clearly living underneath it
if not inside, in the cellar, where I
have found your torn shed skins.

You must have been frightened too
when I caught you in the webbing
of the lacrosse stick and flung you
into the woods, where you landed
dangling from a vine-covered branch,
shamelessly twisted. Now I
am the one who is ashamed, unable
to untangle my feelings,
braided into my DNA or buried
deep in the part of my brain
that is most like yours.



"To a Snake" by Jeffrey Harrison, from Into Daylight (Tupelo Press, 2014). © Jeffrey Harrison. Reprinted with permission of the poet. All rights reserved.

Art credit: Photograph of a milk snake by George Grall/NGS.


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