A Cranefly in September

She is struggling through grass-mesh – not flying,

Her wide-winged, stiff, weightless basket-work of limbs

Rocking, like an antique wain, a top-heavy ceremonial cart

Across mountain summits

(Not planing over water, dipping her tail)

But blundering with long strides, long reachings, reelings

And ginger-glistening wings

From collision to collision.

Aimless in no particular direction,

Just exerting her last to escape out of the overwhelming

Of whatever it is, legs, grass,

The garden, the county, the country, the world –

Sometimes she rests long minutes in the grass forest

Like a fairytale hero, only a marvel can help her.

She cannot fathom the mystery of this forest

In which, for instance, this giant watches –

The giant who knows she cannot be helped in any way.

Her jointed bamboo fuselage,

Her lobster shoulders, and her face

Like a pinhead dragon, with its tender moustache,

And the simple colourless church windows of her wings

Will come to an end, in mid-search, quite soon.

Everything about her, every perfected vestment

Is already superfluous.

The monstrous excess of her legs and curly feet

Are a problem beyond her.

The calculus of glucose and chitin inadequate

To plot her through the infinities of the stems.

The frayed apple leaves, the grunting raven, the defunct tractor

Sunk in nettles, wait with their multiplications

Like other galaxies.

The sky’s Northward September procession, the vast soft armistice,

Like an Empire on the move,

Abandons her, tinily embattled

With her cumbering limbs and cumbered brain.