A found poem, consisting of various captions copied verbatim from descriptions of small figurines displayed in the Asian Wing of the Dayton Art Institute, in the state of Ohio, in the United States.
Menuki, sometimes called sword fittings, are matching or complementary pairs of tiny metal sculptures, traditionally secured to the hilt of a samurai sword and thought to improve the grip.
They were hammered from sheets of copper or alloys of silver and gold and were held in position on either side of a sword’s hilt by braids of silk.
— Jared Carter

Antique Japanese sword handle tsuka showing the ornament menuki held in place by the binding ito.

Sword Fittings, 18th-19th century, Edo period.
MENUKI Each in the form of a cluster of branches and a flowering plum Each in the form of celestial dragons Each in the form of a cluster of flowers wrapped around a rolled mat Each in the form of a crane with spread wings nestled amidst the upper branches of an ornamental spreading pine One in the form of a prancing stag the other in the form of a stag nuzzling a recumbent doe One in the form of a cluster of grasses with a crescent moon the other of grasses with the new moon Each in the form of Mount Fuji One in the form of a court noble in military dress the other in the form of a sage holding a book Each in the form of a woven basket filled with sprays of flowers Each in the form of a cluster of eggplants One in the form of a crane taking flight the other in the form of a heron Each in the form of a cluster of peacocks Each in the form of a crawfish and waterweeds Each in the form of crickets and wildflowers Each in the form of two galloping horses One in the form of a nightingale in flight the other in the form of the moon Each in the form of a horse cleaning itself beside a shallow stream One in the form of a stalking tiger the other in the form of a seated tiger Each in the form of a fisherman walking with a large wicker basket Each in the form of a samurai astride a galloping horse Each in the form of three Chinese sages playing go Each in the form of a gold pheasant backed by a cluster of kiku, millet, wildflowers, and grasses Each in the form of a fisherman poling a boat
First published in Nexus.
Jared Carter’s most recent collection, The Land Itself, is from Monongahela Books in West Virginia. His Darkened Rooms of Summer: New and Selected Poems, with an introduction by Ted Kooser, was published by the University of Nebraska Press in 2014. A recipient of several literary awards and fellowships, Carter is from the state of Indiana in the U.S.
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