Approaching the Ground
By Ange Mlinko
With a dolly and a zoom, the airbus
entire Everglades shows us:
blotchy cloud-shadows thrown
on seepage algae’s overgrown.
Observe—the air we freely breathe
from this height seems to sheath
earth in miasma. The clouds look
like dross. The Everglades look
like dross. Biomass is, essentially, dross.
In Miami, all the gold that could enclose
a woman’s finger, wrist, or neck
was on display, as if to deflect
knowledge of her own mossiness.
Pretend not to know what this says
about our aspirations to the high life.
Up in the airbus, I see as if
for the first time how a cloverleaf
turns a highway into a motif
on the margins of a manuscript
illuminated with a wing that tipped
itself in asphalt. The story it tells
wants unstapling into angels,
heavenly bodies drawn raptly in
on tail winds, touched with halogen.
Source: Poetry (December 2020)