Two Poems | Frances Boyle

Micro-fragments

 

It’s Earth Day and my daughter

is reading up on oceans. She wants

to quiz me about the floating plastic

continent, but I know little more

than she does. She scrolls to pictures

of gummy squirrels and dumbo

octopuses found in the abyssalpelagic

zone – she stumbles over the word –

the coldest murkiest depths of the sea.

 

This fine day, we’d been gadding

about, playground to flea market

to library, but now she’s set on saving

the Deepsea Oasis, brings me a petition

I should sign. Of course I do, feeling her

clasp this cause in hands and heart,

such sympathy for these cute clowns:

gummies neon yellow with waving tails,

red bellies, cephalopods with elephant ears.

 

My mind is still on the trash vortex as I

knuckle tired eyes. Phosphenes spiral

behind my lids and bright circles concatenate,

image lining up behind image, like celestial

bodies in syzygy, or scenes in old musicals

when a sequined showgirl high-steps aside

to reveal, turn by brisk turn, each member

of the chorus in fluid moves down the line.

Micro-fragments dance in the current’s gyre.

 

 

 

Thresholds

 

At night all cats are grey but so too the fingers

of dawn move grey, caress, strum a warning

 

sound, a deep bass note of beginning. The dark

in the morning, before light gets a fingergrip.

 

And the dark yields, the dark notates the dawn

chorus, birds that begin, one note then twelve,

 

then silence until the day is fully revealed, arriving

to sweep dusty webs away, a banishment of the grey-

 

garmented, who seem reluctant to go but willing

to be pushed. The break in the dark, a well of inky

 

space that a bucket cascades through.

I am accustomed to the dark, at least at times.

 

But the trees grow less distinct on a twilit path,

the rocks, fist-sized lumps protruding from snow

 

are blotches now, the branches and roots stumble-

traps for my unwary boots. My dog a pale bounding

 

blur, the crack of twigs as he plows through amplified

to firecracker, gunshot. Ricochet to childhood

 

evenings, walking home from Brownies, a high wall

of piled snow between street and sidewalk, cliffs

 

I scale. The yellow kitchen light and warm smells,

meatloaf or macaroni casserole, welcoming

 

me in from the cold outside air. Threshold

of dark to cross, or hover over.

 

 

Photo Credit: Curtis Perry

Frances Boyle (she/her) is a Canadian author, living in Ottawa. Her most recent poetry collections are Openwork and Limestone (2022) and Light-carved Passages (2024). Her other publications include Tower, a novella (2018), Seeking Shade, short stories (2020) and Skin Hunger, a novel (forthcoming 2026). Recent and upcoming publications include work in Glass Poetry, The Fiddlehead, South Dakota Review, The New Quarterly and The Ex-Puritan. Follow her at @francesboyle19 and visit www.francesboyle.com for more.

 

 

Fragment Photo by M.Alazia in Unsplash

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