Positive environmental stories and poems
Pens of the Earth

Portuguese Man o’ War

Portuguese Man o’ War

by Christina Moran

 

To Samoa, Kilkee, Galveston, South Avalon,

Newquay, Tiree, Bonchurch, and Tresco,

to all these shores and more, gelatinous

bladders of gases, balloons of rainbow

blob, with crested sails like crimped glass,

arrive on a random tide, tempest-blown,

 

current-driven, to lie perkily on a beach,

as sweet to look at as a soap sud bubble.

And their sibling parts, the gene sharers

and key group members, the terrible

tentacles with venomous barbs and wires,

where are they? Maybe clumped beneath,

 

coiled alongside, or floating somewhere,

strings of indigo, caerulean, and turquoise

blue, clone troops, leaderless, half-dead

but still heavily armed and dangerous.

But all to no point. Without old comrades

and companions, their prey-dissolvers

 

and digesters (gastro-heroes, the gut-

bags and mouths that hang beneath

the inflated floats), the tentacles’ poison

and stretchy fishing hoists are not enough

to go it alone. They’re doomed. But one

key task in life’s battle plan is to mate.

 

Either a Man O’ War or Woman O’ War,

the creature, the colony, the whole team

is one sex, and has a special crew to make

either sperm or egg. The water column

ensures what comes next: the Atlantic

and other seas spawn new siphonophores.

 

The Man O’ War’s not an animal. It’s a They,

not an It but multiple zooids, the existence

of each dependent on the others- a union

astounding in complexity and persistence.

For millions of years this drifting galleon

of cells has been setting its sail to the sky.

 

Image by Sergio Serjão from Pixabay