Professor Owen Makes Love to Miss Anning
Magpie Miller
[Richard] Owen decided [he would] 'take a run down to make love to Mary Anning at Lyme and then post home.' However, his plans to flatter Mary Anning, and doubtless exploit her ideas, do not appear to have come to fruition.
-- Deborah Cadbury, The Dinosaur Hunters
His hands:
I was surprised by
her hands: long-fingered,
broad, fresh
and delicate
the palms as rough
as the belly
of a lamb.
as any quarryman's.
Neither my mother
nor dear
brother ever had
such hands.
Had she been a man,
Too,
I noted
the hard skin of that hand
his great,
assessing eyes
might have scratched my
own, such eyes
as I have found
as if I met
the paw of some ancient
in the face
of a falcon.
reptile. The turtle-beak
that pecks and pecks
at the vegetation it calls on
for sustenance.
Note: This poem comes from Elusive Beasts, a life-in-poems of proto-paleontologist Mary Anning (1799-1847) of Lyme Regis, England. Impoverished for most of her days, Anning persisted in digging up and selling fossils to the wealthy collectors, the academics, and the tourists who visited her shop.