by Sarah Westcott
All century trash floated round the gyre
of the Pacific: bright and shiny, shoes
baked themselves open, grew weedy gills,
shoals of rolling bottles nudged each other,
blister packs burst delicately –
the scent of rubber wove itself round
chair legs like a cat.
There were swirls of wilted condoms,
ribbed and stippled, a shining dummy teat,
slowly turning tyres: the stuff of shucked
and cast-off lives, cresting rills of milky foam,
breeding in long nests of hair.
Worst of all in the warm clutter
were the shopping bags of every shade,
plaited by the waves’ regular hand
or domed, translucent as a bloom of medusae,
ripped membranes flickering like something precious.
One day when the sky hung heavy,
I gunned the outboard motor, ducked the boom
to take a closer look. The brine was thick,
sounding a thin high note like a bell.
Mass jostled for attention,
each piece sliding and mounting the other
as if silence pushed it out of the sea,
back into my hands, offering it up.




