Gnats
after Robert Hooke, Micrographia (1665) Their world is a glass of rainwater. They move up and down through the clearness, swallowing their way, or hang by their tails from the surface: tiny transparent caterpillars with their bristled segments of body, horned trophies of head. The glass holds nothing that I can see, but they find matter to eat in it, which pulses through a black thread of gut. They graze what they breathe, the blank element they dangle in. After some days, I observed their heads to fatten and grow monstrous, the tails to curl and dwindle. They floated head-up now, like commas, not feeding, yet they were still alive