CATHERINE MACDONALD
Rousing the Machinery
The tygers of wrath are wiser than the horses of instruction.
—William Blake
i
Observe the perpetual boy, as one
with the pop-eyed crowd. He’s come to see
the King’s menagerie: camel, bear
leopard, lion, tyger—stripe over stripe,
swinging its heavy head, with each sullen step.
He notes the gold globe of its pupil,
the eyes’ bulge and slow blink. Who will extol
this captive, pacing the round tower
room? Who will grind its bones for luck, pluck
stiff whiskers for a paintbrush, rend fat
for an aphrodisiac? Who will inhale
scent of musk, tang of urine
soaked in stone, sing marvelous, its assets?
The boy?
ii
This morning in Raleigh’s exurban flank,
I watch the bad boys of Selma
Alternative High School craft paper wasps.
They loft them across the bedlam
of the classroom to where the tyger, perfect-
bound, sleeps soundly in my hands. With a stroke,
a stroke, a stroke, the machinery is roused
and in the northeast corner of the classroom,
above our heads, gangly wasps disgorge wood to make
paper. Take aim: the miracle occurs
in a vessel, an enclosure, in a lidded pot
on a hot stove, in a woman’s body
where a child grows, or in the insect
jaw, ganglia, and lobe.