By Matthew Francis
After Robert Hooke
All afternoon a reddish trickle
out of the roots of the beech
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and across the lawn,
a sort of  rust that shines and dances.
Close up, it proves to be ant,
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each droplet a horned
traveler finicking its way round
the crooked geometry
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of a grass forest.
A finger felled in their path rocks them,
amazed, back on their haunches.
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I see them tasting
the air for subtle intelligence,
till one ventures to scale it,
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and others follow.
They are fidgety subjects to draw.
If you sink the feet in glue
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the rest twists and writhes;
kill one, the juices evaporate
in seconds, leaving only
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the shriveled casing.
I dunked one in brandy. It struggled
till the air rose from its mouth
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in pinprick bubbles.
I let it soak an hour, then dried it,
observed the spherical head,
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the hairlike feelers,
the grinning vice of its sideways jaw,
the coppery armor plate
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with its scattered spines.
Some draft stirred it then. It rose to all
its feet, and set off across
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the rough miles of desk.