| 
 | 
 Visitation by Mark Doty 
						When I heard he had entered the harbor,and circled the wharf for days,
 I expected the worst: shallow water,
 
 confusion, some accident to bring
 the young humpback to grief.
 Don't they depend on a compass
 
 lodged in the salt-flooded folds
 of the brain, some delicate
 musical mechanism to navigate
 
 their true course?  How many ways,
 in our century's late iron hours,
 might we have led him to disaster?
 
 That, in those days, was how
 I'd come to see the world:
 dark upon dark, any sense
 
 of spirit an embattled flame
 sparked against wind-driven rain
 till pain snuffed it out.  I thought,
 
 This is what experience gives us ,
 and I moved carefully through my life
 while I waited. . .  Enough,
 
 it wasn't that way at all.  The whale
 —exuberant, proud maybe, playful,
 like the early music of Beethoven—
 
 cruised the footings for smelts
 clustered near the pylons
 in mercury flocks.  He
 
 (do I have the gender right?)
 would negotiate the rusty hulls
 of the Portuguese fishing boats
 
 —Holy Infant, Little Marie—
 with what could only be read
 as pleasure, coming close
 
 then diving, trailing on the surface
 big spreading circles
 until he'd breach, thrilling us
 
 with the release of pressured breath,
 and the bulk of his sleek young head
 —a wet black leather sofa
 
 already barnacled with ghostly lice—
 and his elegant and unlikely mouth,
 and the marvelous afterthought of the flukes,
 
 and the way his broad flippers
 resembled a pair of clownish gloves
 or puppet hands, looming greenish white
 
 beneath the bay's clouded sheen.
 When he had consumed his pleasure
 of the shimmering swarm, his pleasure, perhaps,
 
 in his own admired performance,
 he swam out the harbor mouth,
 into the Atlantic.  And though grief
 
 has seemed to me itself a dim,
 salt suspension in which I've moved,
 blind thing, day by day,
 
 through the wreckage, barely aware
 of what I stumbled toward, even I
 couldn't help but look
 
 at the way this immense figure
 graces the dark medium,
 and shines so: heaviness
 
 which is no burden to itself.
 What did you think, that joy
 was some slight thing?
 |  |