“Poetry surprises us with what we already know.” – John Fuller
Born in January,
1937 in Great Britain, Fuller is the son of poet and professor Roy Fuller and
went on to a similar career of his own, authoring 15 collections of poetry,
several other books, and teaching at colleges and universities in the United
States and Britain. Among his best known
collections are Stones and Fires, Song and Dance, and The Dice
Cup. A multiple major award winner for his own works, he also established
The Sycamore Press to publish many of the most influential poets of the last 50
years. For Saturday's Poem, here is Fuller's,
An Exchange between the Fingers and the
Toes
Fingers:
Cramped, you are hardly anything but
fidgets.
We, active, differentiate the
digits:
Whilst you are merely little toe
and big
(Or, in the nursery, some futile
pig)
Through vital use as pincers there
has come
Distinction of the finger
and the thumb;
Lacking a knuckle you have sadly
missed
Our meaningful translation to a fist;
And only by the curling of that
joint
Could the firm index come
to have a point.
You cannot punch or demonstrate or
hold
And therefore cannot write or pluck
or mould:
Indeed, it seems deficiency in art
Alone would prove you the inferior
part.
Toes:
Not so, my friends. Our clumsy
innocence
And your deft sin is the main
difference
Between the body’s near extremities.
Please do not think that we intend
to please:
Shut in the dark, we once were free
like you.
Though you enslaved us, are you not
slaves, too?
Our early balance caused your later
guilt,
Erect, of finding out how we were
built.
Your murders and discoveries compile
A history of the crime of being
agile,
And we it is who save you when you
fight
Against the odds: you cannot take to
flight.
Despite your fabrications and your
cunning,
The deepest instinct is expressed in
running.
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