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The Divers of Cheju by Allison Funk

depoetry
August 3, 2015

 

At dawn the rocks are black with divers.

Under the sun’s dull coin, in mussel-dark rubber

and masks, the women of Cheju plunge tankless

into the unlit rooms of the sea, drawn by the siren

of necessity to gather urchins, octopus and abalone.

The one my age hurts everywhere,

nearly deaf from the depths. Fifty years

she’s entered the cold peril, felt the when,

when of her lungs to which the waves have no answer

of air. Her face contorted, oxygen-poor

after four, five, six minutes under,

the old one, surfacing, holds no treasure

in her hands larger than a man’s and barnacle-raw.

Just the seafood she must clean before dark.

Can she recall the pacific water where she swam once,

sweet oblivion, or imagine the volcanic birth of her island,

the contractions bearing lava, steam wall-high

where fire met water, how the molten rock cooled,

how it hardened? Grown, the woman does not cry.

 

 


Read more of Allison Funk's poems in the Spring 2015 edition of the Delaware Poetry Review.