This morning we thought we saw
a tiny boat washed up in the storm,
or a thick smooth log soaked black.
Closer, it looked like a fish,
then a person: almost
exactly our size when young,
porpoises, even as corpses, resemble us.
This one lay dead on our
beach in the early sun.

There was no sign of struggle. Its still
perfect eye seemed attentive. Waves slapped it.
The black skin glistened, then dried to leather.
The black tongue hung to one side, hard as a boot.
Above the porcelain baby teeth
a mucous blot of sea grass clung
to the nostril wing,
flies bothered the poor parts
under the tail.