Photograph: Getty/ Getty Images To mark the end of her poet laureateship, Duffy introduces new poems celebrating the beauty and variety of an insect world facing extinction by Alice Oswald, Daljit Nagra, Paul Muldoon and more
W hich is lovelier and more true: “Brexit means Brexit” or “Where the bee sucks, there suck I”? The ugly meaninglessness of Theresa May’s dire mantra, wailed as David Cameron fled to the shed, is a prime cause of our current political chaos, just as surely as Ariel’s sweet song continues to remind us of our vital connection to the natural world. When we demean language, we demean our lives, our society and ultimately our planet. Poetry stands against this, timelessly, in Sappho, Shakespeare, John Donne, Emily Dickinson ...
I could have invited the poets gathered here to write about Brexit, but there is something more important. Earlier this year, the journal Biological Conservation published the first global scientific review of the insect population, recording that more than 40% of species are declining and a third are endangered. The journal concludes, “unless we change our ways of producing food, insects as a whole will go down the path of extinction in a few decades. The repercussions this will have for the planet’s ecosystems are catastrophic.” As school children all over the world demonstrate against climate change and Extinction Rebellion carry their trees on to Waterloo Bridge, here are several newly commissioned poems, and one of mine, that celebrate and properly regard insects, as poets have done since Virgil. Everything that lives is connected and poetry’s duty and joy is in making those connections visible in language. Carol Ann Duffy
The Human Bee by Carol Ann Duffy I became a human bee at twelve, when they gave me my small wand, my flask of pollen, and I walked with the other bees out to the orchards.
I worked first in apples, climbed the ladder into the childless arms of a tree and busied myself, dipping and tickling. duping and tackling, tracing the petal’s guidelines down to the stigma. Human, humming, I knew my lessons by heart: the ovary would become the fruit, the ovule the seed, fertilised by my golden touch, my Midas touch.
I moved to lemons, head and shoulders lost in blossom; dawn till dusk, my delicate blessing. All must be docile, kind, unfraught for one fruit – pomegranate, lychee, nectarine, peach, the rhymeless orange. And if an opening bud was out of range, I’d jump from my ladder onto a branch and reach.
So that was my working life as a bee, till my eyesight blurred, my hand was a trembling bird in the leaves, the bones of my fingers thinner than wands. And when they retired me, I had my wine from the silent vines, and I’d known love, and I’d saved some money –
but I could not fly and I made no honey.
ladybird by Andrew McMillan first it was the magic porridge pot absent from the colony of books when I’d gone home back to my bedroom hungry for what I missed of my childhood
weeks later the enormous turnip and then the three billy goats gruff cantered off and no-one noticed the small black swarm of letters that hung in the air like dust and then were gone
at first people seemed to remember the stories but then they started forgetting how big had the turnip been? had there really been a turnip?
and then there was no turnip no goats in the field and all the shelves were empty and all the streets silent
*
when I was a boy mum placed in my hand a ladybird that contained an entire treasure island now back at my house one page flaps at the back of the bookcase
I hold it its simple intricacy its worlds within worlds as it stops moving and dissolves to tissue and becomes a ghost of itself in my small hands
Moths & Butterflies by Michael Longley I want to talk to dead children About moths and butterflies, The Peacock’s eyespots, two Then four, beauty and terror; Six Spot Burnet’s warning Black and red (hydrogen Cyanide); the female Winter moth that cannot fly; And one with no proboscis That cannot feed, a ghetto moth; Caterpillars that gobble Stinging nettles and ragwort; Nightmares of the chrysalis.
In September forty-four Hanuš Hachenburg writesSomewhere, far away out there, Childhood sweetly sleeps Along that path among the trees; Listen to Pavel FriedmannI never saw another Butterfly, that butterfly Was the last one, butterflies Don’t live in the ghetto; I want to talk to dead children, The children of Terezín, About moths and butterflies.
The Host by Imtiaz Dharker While I have been away the fruit flies have moved in with their extended family and rise politely off a feast of black banana skin to welcome me home. I swat and slap, but they just laugh on the updraft of my flapping, batting hands.
The banana gone, I open a window, hoping they will make off to some other repast but they post a halo round my head, two hundred wingbeats to a second, hatched with a brain far quicker than mine. At my desk, I am possessed, follow the threads for evidence
of pestilence, the death of civilisations by Zebub, Arob, all the dust of Egypt turned to gnats that torment livestock, squat on ruined crop, rotted fish and frog. In the face of this invasion, I am an avenger sent to stop a plague,
enter Kill Fruit Flies , study the traps, fill a glass jar with cider vinegar, stir in sugar, cover with cunning cling-film, pierce and wait, and they come, hover like decorous guests at a table, perch on the rim. I watch them drown one by one, then return to my desk. But just
as I begin to write, one rises up at the edge of my sight like the helicopter in North by Northwest. I spin back into battle, set the trap again, more delicious, more sugar, more stealth. It sits on the lip, licks at the cling-film, sips. I strike. It dies a vinegar death.
Through the rest of the day I revisit the site. No sign of return. The next morning no-one is there, the jar untouched, my table bare in the desolate kitchen. I try to work but keep coming back to stand like an expectant host waiting to welcome the guest I miss.
To a Lady, viewed by a Head-Louse by Denise Riley I with my triumphant bites Vex useless human parasites. You world-devourers are for – what? “Useful” you yourselves are not. Refer me, lady, to your Gaia – My jaws will raise your blush of fire. When humans pause to think of me It makes their skin crawl eerily: “Delusional parasitosis”: infestation Of purely phantom nits’ gestation. It’s my sole work to multiply – The task of ladies to ask “Why Should such a pointless breed exist?” Only the entomologist Admits my “good-for-nothing” species To own the interest of its faeces For those can raise allergic wheals Then mortified parental squeals Or groans of mums or dads who find Their darlings’ hair home to my kind, Each louse egg’s tight-cemented pearl Superglued to their shampooed girl. I’ll plant rosettes of telltale red High on her neck, low on her head Until your steel rake catches me Or unguents loose their fatal sea. Fleas acquire some charming tropes For amorous fluid-mingling hopes; Lice? Condemned to Owen’s trench By reportage of mud-blood stench. Some sorts are meals for grooming birds While others have engendered words Like “lousy”, apt for human speech – Each head-louse purely is for each. My species’ world obeys no brief Of reciprocity – such a relief Not to claim virtue. Ah, your “rich Biodiversity”! Makes you itch. I am for nothing – only to increase My number, swelling after my decease. “Purposeless” insects may prove good For thwarting your delusion that all should Conform to human dreams of mutual aid – Presumptuous fantasy we lice downgrade. Lady, I’d answer Robbie Burns: Let other species take their turns And do not keep so dour and mean Vaunting your old Anthropocene.
Inners by Zaffar Kunial Six Riddles
Green petitioner – limbs up, at the twelfth-hour – in hope of prey. Our prayer .
—
Forktailed in ear- thy colours, in earthy bark – in dark places I hear.
—
Behind life, death’s sting – that barbed thorn, torn, ripped from your end – beyond being .
—
Longshanks. Bad copter. You fly like you carry land.Daddy , you falter.
—
Moonlit dust, gather with each mote , death’s weight – take wing Make off, small mother.
—
Summer bird – mute, thin – heaven’s hinge-clip. Flip-flopper. Stemless flower. Soul thing.
Thinnings
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Holly Blue … margin haunter – through life’s sharp hedge – thin blue flame keeps going.
—
Clouded Yellow – blur in the laburnum – old thin light I remember.
—
You belong betweenPale Mottled Willow – whether this world, or that one.
—
Blotched Emerald – there, past the hospital curtain, far off, off kilter.
—
Your mark wasn’t thin –Purple Hairstreak , oak lover – but wide. Dark lightning.
—
Green Hairstreak hovers – Mum waves a gift, found again – my four-leaf clover.
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Ghost Swift – underwings, flash your white, underwrite our long disappearing.
—
O Dingy Skipper wobbly captain, sailing oakbrown and sombre.
—
… nettles, willow, elm, … in hops, on rocks, walls, Comma , don’t stop, carry on
—
Through sleeves of thin air, you appear, bright magician – here gone – Small Copper .
—
Soul, Purple Emperor – shy dash through oak crowns – cut in to their green weather.
— — — — — — — — — — — —
So ‘cut into’ – in -sect – this cutting loss. Mine. Yours. This small world, thinning.
Clegs and Midges by Paul Muldoon 1
The fact that Socrates is represented by Aristophanes as a gadfly tormenting the body politic in some political horse-barn or byre only stiffens
my resolve to raise the bar back at the milking parlor. Taking their name from the Viking term for a “burr,”
clegs have a way of spiking a story whilst splashing it all over the front page. I’ll be damned if I’ll let them come within striking
distance of my home patch. The green of the cesspool is the green of ceremonial grade matcha. Having made a botch
of my exposed forearms, the clegs now mooch about the hindquarters of a heifer. The bullock that had long since seemed to have lost his mojo
takes off across the water meadow like a zephyr. Since I am no longer wont to be targeted as Chilon the Ephor
was targeted by his fellow Spartans, when it comes to sustaining wounds the clegs and I are pretty much even-steven. The midges, in the meantime, have thrown caution to the winds.
2
The fact that Christ himself would seem to have suffered not only the ordeal of a cleg in the side but a midge-coronet is enough to rattle
the best of us. The purple of Jesus’s robe is so ingrained I may find it difficult to commit, in my new version, to Matthew’s “scarlet.” I should be able to organize a workaround
in the matter of paying off the “harlot.” There’ll be no stopping the presses. That’s one of the translator’s perks. I’ll be damned if I’ll allow those varlets
to confine me to barracks like the monk who offered me matcha in the Ryoan-ji temple in Kyoto. The description of Saint Paul “kicking against the pricks”
I’ve chosen to render as “kicking against the goads ” so as not to offend any shrinking violets among the money-lenders. I’m not going to dress up “a den of iniquity,”
though, when it comes to the playing of skin flutes. I’m happy to go with the flow particularly if the story stays below the fold,
given how a warble-fly in the ointment is sometimes perceived by the hoi polloi as a major hurdle, as if it represents some kind of character flaw.
3
The fact that a rabble tends to rouse the rabble is no less true of our raised bogs than the Boulevard Saint-Germain. It’s only another ripple that sends the ripple
across a stagnant ring over which the midges box so clever. My horse tugs at her halter as if they’ve set their beaks
at her rather than me. Even the monk illuminating my version of the Psalter views this world in terms of the column inch. I’ll be damned, too, if I’ll falter
before the invisible. If the idea of a garden where everything seems to hinge on one of its fifteen boulders always being hidden from view sends a shiver through my palfrey’s haunch,
it also makes my own unease look paltry. It’s true, of course, that Saint Patrick’s claim to have herded swine on Slemish connects him to Saint Anthony, another consensus- builder,
but the recent implanting of a microchip containing the entire Rhemish Testament under the skin of my mare confirms I’d not let a blemish
even slightly mar my ambition. Incorporate , I always say, as a monk incorporates the hole of a warble on a sheet of vellum into the phrase “less is m( )re.”
Brimstone Moth (viewed under a Microscope) by Sean Borodale I see in the mirror of what saw me – a microbiology siphoned off from the light of the sun.
Quixotic kinetics. Quiver of leaf over rotten shade.
Under magnification you become snipped up harp. Pieces swerved into the prismatic. A magnetic, maniac, detail turbulent with attention.
All touch is mistake;
a breathed, stirred presence through the cohesive wilds of your hair; your ordinary, magnified shreds of infidel.
Where is our commune?
Re-focus, stare at your thorax; search the bedraggled, yellowed grass; where the coin of last night’s moon was drowned.
A hole at the heart-place, round and cold as the disc of a fish-eye.
Who was it left you, like a fairy leaves money, from another world?
Still Life by Mark Pajak In the fruit on gran’s bedside table, under the translucent skin of a grape, the black pips at the core seem to be crawling.
What’s going on inside the greenlit gum of its flesh are six ants: the whiskers of their legs, their small plectrum heads and snipping mouths.
Soon all the fruit bowl will be moving. Already an apple’s breast has a visible pulse. A once-dense peach is deflating.
And what can she do but stare from her hospital bed; seeming all the stiller for her slow pink eyelids, those quick teaspoon breaths.
Imagines by Yvonne Reddick That garden of émigrés and locals: sacred fig, date palm. I was sent to clip the shockhead lemon tree, and dropped the shears when I saw I’d perpetrated murder: an inch-worm, halved. Chubby infant pythons, its four siblings cowered under leaves. My sister and I salvaged them, provisioned them with lime-twig offcuts, camouflaged from sparrows and the boys who dismembered soldier-ants in Science. Seven years since the swarm of Nighthawks ripped the sound-barrier, each bearing its high- explosive clutch, zeroing on Baghdad. Shots imaged the troops, mantis-eyed in gas-masks. They shredded leaves to veins for a fortnight then inverted their skins, like the werewolves painted in my book of Grimms’ tales. Armoured chrysalids folded their flight. North of the border, the local despot unleashed nerve-gas trialled on insects. Birds plummeted from nests, dogs choked on bloody foam; finally, people hacked up their lungs. That memory raw behind the eyelids. When the Tornados flew overhead, their sonic boom detonated my sister’s night-terrors: bombs razing our house. We watched their eclosion – damp wing-rags unscrolling like hibiscus petals, the oil-sheen shot with lemon. I couldn’t say if their checked dappling was the likeness of a silk prayer-rug, or a stained-glass icon. Four chequered swallowtails, flexing their mirrored wings. We watched them flicker through our classroom door, into the flowering season. The ripeness inconceivable without them.
Stevie Smith Is Still Ear by Daljit Nagra not waving but swatting a gnat by the Mimram when the kickback cometh from the dead gnat’s dad swinging me centrifugally by the e a r through me Yellow Paper all the way to Yeovil and onward atomising through the higgledy-piggledy yet still ear if you get my drift cos the gnat dad from wherever I land keeps swinging what’s left of me by the ear. how was I to know gnats don’t nip? just now did you ear the swatted gnat-son hum
I couldn’t slip her the prophecy dad she slap me down afore I was done now I’m waxed in her ear say, see?
Love Poem, Lampyridae (Glowworms) by Fiona Benson The female born again with little changed except she has no mouth and may not eat, except she has this urge to climb, and a light she must raise and twist; the male born again with little changed except he has no mouth, except he has this urge to search, and wings – oh she must twist and turn her tail’s green fire like bait, its little stab of brightness in the night, and he must search with wings through troubled air to find her pinhole lure, its single, green, seducing star .... All night she signals him in:come find me – it is time – and almost dawn; all night he looks for her in petrol stations villages and homesteads, the city’s neon signs:where are you – it is time – and almost dawn.... Once were humans wandered in the lanes, led astray by fairies, foxfire, who found their stranger selves and brought them home. Now the dark is drowned, but some things you can only find beyond the light, and it is time and almost dawn and love, my love, there is no finding then.
Moth by Alice Oswald Sometimes when you step outside you hear a gasp a sharp intake of rooks being quickly deflated into trees
so that your arm un-hinges and your shoulders tilt their fans and almost shrug you to the woods and then a sigh
it would be good you think it would be good to sleep on the sycamore’s top floor
but then again there are hedges and night-scented road-edges and if I know my own stumbling hovering head-heavy body then I could sneak along there flying by misgivings
and leaf by leaf by constantly tripping up and falling flat and juddering forwards at last I might be given back my markings
and in a moth’s life in the ditch’s low level sky by the glow of a flower in the clothes of a messenger maybe this wish whatever it is will simplify
A Swallowtail at Turf Fen by Matthew Hollis When rain-work ends, at Ranworth or Hickling or Strumpshaw Fen, wherever there is milk-parsley, wherever there is teasel and ragged robin, you may see one: its forewing shocked in lemon–coal, its hindwing tapered as a develin’s tail, fretted with bloodspot and cobalt. More likely you may not, so finical in turnout no expert can ensure it; far less a boy who grew up counting not butterfly but coypu, the shy hump on the waterline, a nest of sedge and shorter sallow; who learned at night the weirdish cries, something like the sound I thought a soul, departing, made. But no sight of a swallowtail; just mardlers’ talk of easterlies that one year swept a brood inland and shook it out in Cambridgeshire – confetti on far weather that children cycled after, their hands high off their handlebars. All day we worked our numb boat in and out of mooring, faking down the bow-rope time again. Evening, the light diminishing, our likelihood at low, we fetched up at How Hill, and wondered at the worth of going on. We trust to see the other not see ourselves alone. And turning to the boat for home, it came at height from the marshman’s hut, peddling and wheeling to the buddleia – fending at damsels, at dragons, coppers, then rising in the fore-wind over Barton, leaving us rooted but renewed, all doubt dispelled, like vow-broken Psyche, lamp raised and heart-sworn, mortal as her miracle takes flight.
Mantis by Ella Duffy She stills herself, a green meditation, angled with desire for aphid, moth.
Icon, on guard, she is threat posed as prophet. A body of tricks, mischief
made leaf, flowering to thorn; a small violence. Trauma is feast.
Mantis, wild queen, her face is geometry at play; a compass for the dead.
Mercy by Martha Sprackland Night after night I must gather tens of insects – millipedes, stinkbugs, houseflies, moths – and expel them. At breakfast the others share their methods, some pressing the bugs under the thumb until they give and smear, their legs coming apart like dry grass, or mashing them with a book, a glass, the heel of a shoe. The walls are remembered with all the little deaths. I had been trapping them between a postcard and a cup and ferrying them laboriously downstairs to the outside door and flicking them into the pine-litter to crawl back up the wall and through the screen into my bedroom for another round. But this morning, in a fury I caught the shield-shaped thing in my bare hand, its legs gyrating feebly against my fingers and ran to the bathroom, where I threw it into the toilet. It turned small circles, swimming an irregular stroke in desperate search of landfall. I watched like the eye of a lightning god, unforgiving as it groped at the smooth blank sides. Only after some too-long stretch of time did I press the flush and whirl it benevolently down into the tank. The last of summer is leaving. Soon the insects will all be sleeping in the walls. If you would just call, or write to me.
Carol Ann Duffy and Friends: Poetry for the Insect Population takes place at 7pm on Monday at Stratford Circus Arts Centre, London, E15. rd-circus. com/whats-on
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