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Poem: Bring Back the Leaf

Science in meter and verse

Szabo Ervin-Edward Getty Images

Edited by Dava Sobel

They sent out a dove: it wobbled home,
wings slicked in a rainbow of oil,
a sprig of tinsel snagged in its beak,
a yard of fishing-line binding its feet.

Bring back, bring back the leaf.


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They sent out an arctic fox:
it plodded the bays
of the northern fringe
in muddy socks
and a nylon cape.

Bring back, bring back the leaf. Bring back the reed and the reef, set the ice sheet back on its frozen plinth, tuck the restless watercourse into its bed, sit the glacier down on its highland throne, put the snow cap back on the mountain peak.

Let the northern lights be the northern lights not the alien glow over Glasgow or Leeds.

A camel capsized in a tropical flood.
Caimans dozed in Antarctic lakes.
Polymers rolled in the sturgeon's blood.
Hippos wandered the housing estates.

Bring back, bring back the leaf. Bring back the tusk and the horn unshorn. Bring back the fern, the fish, the frond and the fowl, the golden toad and the pygmy owl, revisit the scene where swallowtails fly through acres of unexhausted sky.

They sent out a boat.
Go little breaker,
splinter the pack-ice and floes, nose
through the rafts and pads
of wrappers and bottles and nurdles and cans,
the bergs and atolls and islands and states
of plastic bags and micro-beads
and the forests of smoke.

Bring back, bring back the leaf, bring back the river and sea.

Simon Armitage, Professor of Poetry at the University of Leeds and the current U.K. national Poet Laureate, wrote "Ark" to commemorate the September 2019 naming of a new polar research ship, the RSS Sir David Attenborough.

More by Simon Armitage
Scientific American Magazine Vol 323 Issue 3This article was originally published with the title “Ark” in Scientific American Magazine Vol. 323 No. 3 (), p. 22
doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0920-22