Shells
We stopped, to hunt shells; burnished rails slid by,
Outcurved through treeless country. Where they lay
in coral, in old dredgings bleached chalk-dry,
We bent in search, the tide’s roar leagues away,
Their waves the glossy ripples of bare heat.
So they had bided, iridescence dimmed
To death-skin white on fluted spiral, pleat,
And oval, or with obscure tracings rimmed
On lip and tongue.
Outcurved through treeless country. Where they lay
in coral, in old dredgings bleached chalk-dry,
We bent in search, the tide’s roar leagues away,
Their waves the glossy ripples of bare heat.
So they had bided, iridescence dimmed
To death-skin white on fluted spiral, pleat,
And oval, or with obscure tracings rimmed
On lip and tongue.
Alone, we poked around
In such pale bedrock rubble; trains clicked past,
Moved us, and then left silence; there we found
More of these shells which, faded, still held fast
To shapes once ocean-living; at our backs
Stretched miles and miles of ties and stolid tracks.
In such pale bedrock rubble; trains clicked past,
Moved us, and then left silence; there we found
More of these shells which, faded, still held fast
To shapes once ocean-living; at our backs
Stretched miles and miles of ties and stolid tracks.