Bog
Sinking into the soft mire, spagnum sponge;
ooze rising inches above my feet: beer brown,
freezing cold. I take a handful and squeeze;
water, so much water drains through my fingers;
I slap away the fresh vegetation; hold my hands
to my nose, am filled with the smell of fertile earth.
Heathers, mosses, sedge and bog cotton;
a wilderness, once a lake, its margins still visible:
green fields and farm houses away in the distance:
Here, in the realm of insects, plants that devour them,
sundews and butterworts, their killer genes expressed
in the mucillage, tentacles, in the traps of their leaves.
And down, down beneath my feet, rich black turf:
countless years of heat, insulation: walls and roofing;
from bountiful earth fuel from the growth of millennia.
There too, the preserved remains of the past: old roads,
wooden tracks, submerged walls, jewelery, weapons, tools;
bodies wearing facial expressions that have defied time.

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