Fish-eyes ogles us, just to say
in that slippery longing way of his,
that sidelong gaping staring way,
‘I envy the cat that milady is.’
We ponder his liquid love, his fins,
and the way each turn makes him squirm and sink
in the tank (predicament for his sins?),
and we sit and groom ourself and think . . .
Can’t help but pity and love the poor
fish-eyes in turn; think biology,
its cycles, return of what’s been before,
carbon reclamation, and all that we,
with wizard knowledge, learned to admire
and along the way, to recognize
as an opportunity to acquire
matter remade thus if one only tries . . .
what we think is this: that a little fish
could become a cat, graceful, sleek and slim,
by means of becoming a dinner dish–
and on thinking that, we devour him.
