Slugs

by Deryn Rees Jones

Each night the slugs have found a way of getting in.,
They slip through cracks, inhabiting corners,
edging up table-legs, walls, or chairs.
With their slug etiquette, slug gestures, 
are they silently dreaming of lettuces, hostas?
Do they elegise greenhouses, commune with their dead?
Or fantasize brethren on distant planets?
What mistakes do they make, and how will they tell us?
Do we ask their forgiveness? Do they imagine us saved?
Of their psychobiographies will I ever be sure? 

Occipital horns conduct in the darkness.
They know nothing of envy, nothing of blame.
In the gastropod inchings of their midnight seances,
the slow rehearsals of molluscular dance,
they’re themselves absolutely, beyond imitation.
And their silvery cast offs Isadora’s 
just at the moment in the silvery moonlight
when she sheds her scarves to a million stars.