NVN Friday: CARCASS
by Melanie DuBose
World’s Rarest Whale Washes Up on New Zealand Beach, Scientists Say: Only six specimens of the spade-toothed whale have ever been identified. This carcass could be the first that scientists are able to dissect. —The New York Times, July 17, 2024
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swimming by he notices on the ocean floor something long sleek dead they hang the body by its tail on the beach some things never change very small fins long beak an endless loop on repeat in my brain my brain with its depths I can not reach but perhaps could synthesize and become a pop star if I knew how to make thoughts into sound outside the window the hills are outlined in red along the horizon am I ashamed to be human? the whale comes from mountains higher than any on earth I get vertigo floating Ex means out my brain circles the parking lot Extinction Existence Depth very small fins long beak proof of life in death hanging by its tail on the beach another dead whale out of water hoisted not quite extinct it seems though rare another summer of fires I swim in the deepest water and wish for something sleek and alive
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Melanie DuBose lives in Los Angeles. Recent poems and prose have appeared or are forthcoming in the Los Angeles Press, Kelp, Gyroscope, and Drunk Monkeys among others. Her favorite award is from the National Weather Association for helping six-year-olds write about the value of wetland preservation.