Rather than answer in
detail the questions she asks, I direct her to Turner Cassity’s “Vegetarian
Mary and the Venus Flytrap” (The Destructive Element: New and Selected Poems,
1998), which poses philosophical questions of a related nature:
“It is not edible, but if
one ate it . . .
For the paradox it poses
should one hate it?
Where upon the food chain
to locate it?
“Would a salad of it or a
souffle
(Soufflé lacking egg
white) be at one removal
Eating meat, and have the
disapproval
“Of the dietarily correct?
Would Fundamentalist
teetotalers be wrecked
If Pitcher Plants should
drown their prey in Sekt?
“(Insekticide: destroying
bugs in bubbly.)
To think of eating meat
unknowing troubles doubly.
I shall sew my lips up and
starve glubly
“(Glumly; I am writing
with a cold)
One-upping native Ecuadorans
of old
Who only sewed the lips of
others, sold
“To ethnocentricists as
shrunken heads.
Not all species are those
protected by the Feds.
The franchise is a Panama
Club Med’s.
“Med-Sea-Born Goddess into
insect trapping,
Permit that a grain of
irritation, capping
My career of vegetary
flapping,
“I seed your natal shell:
the inner, all
Encompassing correctness—amnesty-in-general—
Where, pure pearl, I end as mineral.”
Cassity poses questions that call for Thomistic rigor. Pitcher plants feature a rolled leaf shaped like a
bowl, containing a soup of digestive enzymes waiting to dissolve careless
insects. Sekt is German sparkling wine; thus, Cassity’s coinage, “Insekticide.”
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