Thursday, 14 July 2016

Louis MacNeice: Pet Shop



Cold blood or warm, crawling or fluttering
Bric-à-brac, all are here to be bought.
Noisy or silent, python or myna,
Fish with long silk trains like dowagers,
Monkeys lost to thought.

In a small tank tiny enamelled
Green terrapin jostle, in a cage a crowd
Of small birds elbow each other and bicker
While beyond the ferrets, eardrum, eyeball
Find that macaw too loud.

Here behind glass lies a miniature desert,
The sand littered with rumpled gauze
Discarded by snakes like used bandages;
In the next door desert fossilized lizards
Stand in a pose, a pause.

But most of the customers want something comfy —
Rabbit, hamster, potto, puss —
Something to hold on the lap and cuddle
Making believe it will return affection
Like some neutered succubus.

Purr then or chirp, you are here for our pleasure,
Here at the mercy of our whim and purse;
Once there was the wild, now tanks and cages,
But we can offer you a home, a haven,
That might prove even worse.


From The Burning Perch (1963). Even if his subject is banal, MacNeice's rhythms are so beguiling that the poem almost exists outside its subject.

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