The Tortoise

          The Tortoise

Modern poetry  modern verse  contemporary poetry  contemporary verse modern poem contemporary poem

“Other poems by Apollinaire relate to Orpheus, for example, ‘The Tortoise,’ whose shell—a gift from Apollo—provided the frame of his lyre.” ~ Michael Schmidt, The  First  Poets, 23

The tortoise might be thought of as a thing

For poetry by Hughes, his awful “Pike”

And so on.  Tortoises don’t make us sing

That often.  Ancient ugliness, they’re like

Revolting dinosauric beasts of old

With metal skin, almost, and blankest face.

They drag and scrabble on the land.  They’re mould

From pre-historic times.  They have a trace

Of hope built in since they’ve survived so long,

But that is it.  And yet Apollo gave

A tortoise shell to Orpheus.  The song

Of poetry, the sweetest and the grave,

Has made the tortoise holy in its grim

Repulsiveness.  It gave the first great hymn.