Dunt: a poem for a dried up river

Very small and damaged and quite dry,
a Roman water nymph made of bone
tries to summon a river out of limestone


very eroded faded
her left arm missing and both legs from the knee down
a Roman water nymph made of bone
tries to summon a river out of limestone


exhausted        utterly worn down
a Roman water nymph made of bone
being the last known speaker of her language
she tries to summon a river out of limestone


little distant sound of dry grass        try again


a Roman water nymph made of bone
very endangered now
in a largely unintelligible monotone
she tries to summon a river out of limestone


little distant sound as of dry grass     try again


exquisite bone figurine with upturned urn
in her passionate self-esteem she smiles looking sideways
she seemingly has no voice but a throat-clearing rustle
as of dry grass                                        try again


she tries leaning
pouring pure outwardness out of a grey urn


little slithering sounds as of a rabbit man in full night-gear,
who lies so low in the rickety willowherb
that a fox trots out of the woods
and over his back and away              try again


she tries leaning
pouring pure outwardness out of a grey urn
little lapping sounds        yes
as of dry grass secretly drinking        try again


little lapping sounds    yes
as of dry grass secretly drinking        try again


Roman bone figurine
year after year in a sealed glass case
having lost the hearing of her surroundings
she struggles to summon a river out of limestone


little shuffling sound as of approaching slippers


year after year in a sealed glass case
a Roman water nymph made of bone
she struggles to summon a river out of limestone


little shuffling sound as of a nearly dried-up woman
not really moving through the fields
having had the gleam taken out of her
to the point where she resembles twilight        try again


little shuffling clicking
she opens the door of the church
little distant sounds of shut-away singing    try again


little whispering fidgeting of a shut-away congregation
wondering who to pray to
little patter of eyes closing                                    try again

very small and damaged and quite dry
a Roman water nymph made of bone
she pleads she pleads a river out of limestone


little hobbling tripping of a nearly dried-up river
not really moving through the fields,
having had the gleam taken out of it
to the point where it resembles twilight.
little grumbling shivering last-ditch attempt at a river
more nettles than water                                        try again


very speechless very broken old woman
her left arm missing and both legs from the knee down
she tries to summon a river out of limestone


little stoved-in sucked thin
low-burning glint of stones
rough-sleeping and trembling and clinging to its rights
victim of Swindon
puddle midden
slum of over-greened foot-churn and pats
whose crayfish are cheap tool-kits
made of the mud stirred up when a stone's lifted
 

it's a pitiable likeness of clear running
struggling to keep up with what's already gone
the boat the wheel the sluice gate
the two otters larricking along                                     go on


and they say oh they say
in the days of better rainfall
it would flood through five valleys
there'd be cows and milking stools
washed over the garden walls
and when it froze you could skate for five miles      yes go on


little loose end shorthand unrepresented
beautiful disused route to the sea
fish path with nearly no fish in
 

Copyright Credit: Alice Oswald, "Dunt: a poem for a dried up river" from Falling Awake. Copyright © 2016 by Alice Oswald. Reprinted by permission of W. W. Norton & Company, Inc..
Source: Falling Awake (W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 2016)