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Martha Serpas.
“The Diener.”

© Martha Serpas.
Used by permission.
All rights reserved.


We hated the early anatomists

for showing us how fragile we are,

how God’s image is composite:

the liver the bright bruise of a sunset,

the thyroid wrapped around our throats

for luck. They saw our brains folded

against our foreheads and knew our hearts

pump dumbly on through the wash.

And wily guts take the brunt of it,

pushing to get rid of while we insist

on taking in and taking in and taking in.

Theirs was heresy, that is, a choice

to reach the Artist by testing the art,

human suffering always the requisite cost.

Change, what keeps all of it the same,

the Teacher says, no new thing

under the sun. What we make, let’s make old

instead, older than the first tool,

which smelled much like the body —

the first blacksmith must have thought —

not quite like displaced blood, but blood at home

in its place among other parts in their places,

and that must be how we began to confuse

the power to examine and change

with the power to create, to be discrete agents,

why we like to see ourselves as whole,

despite the diener piling legs on a cot,

despite the pruned artery, tied and cut.



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Source

Serpas, Martha. “The Diener.” The Diener. Barataria Poetry. Baton Rouge: LSU Pr., 2015. © Martha Serpas. Used by permission. All rights reserved.


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