Issue 3.3
March 2025
Devon Brock
A Wednesday in February
A Wednesday in February
*Upon the Coteau des Prairies*
Word came late over snow-clotted roads
that my friends had died, far from here,
far from this white forbiddance.
In this place of debt and remittance,
of bone and hide half-buried in the fields,
where the tops of fences read like Braille
and the once keen edge of the horizon
is no more than a formless chill that filters
through the shelter belts as finger drifts,
the dogs lost to the blizzard still shred
on their lamp posts and what moves
are memories that rip through me as hail.
I lean on my shovel.
Down at the end
of the driveway,
my car is a welt in the snow
bandaged by the plow.
The clear streets beyond are slick,
they glisten in streaks, and I think,
if I dig long enough, far enough,
I may find them again: my friends.
But most times, those dogs lost
to the blizzard never return.
Devon Brock
This Wandering Hush
This Wandering Hush
It’s called a murmur. And just as the first
bird turns, so too the flock smudged upon the sky
unfolds, darkens and dives, masses and bursts
in blooms no wind on all the earth can pry
from a bud nailed to a stalk. Starling, take
dusk as your own, for no garden will leap
from a dim afternoon to the cusp of a lake,
nor fury the mind to its wondrous sleep.
Starling, since neither rose nor lily may
conjure as smoke all the shapes of the world—
the creases of loss, of cities come and gone,
the mute passage of form upon form—you blaze
in the eye while all of a life unfurls
like a minute of grace in a darkening dawn.
Shama
Pigeon Flying
Pigeon Flying
The birds stir on their terrace loft.
Their cooing wakes me up, cutting out the friction
of cars on the tarmac below.
The browns are inherited
from Grandpa who broke his thumb
in college and stayed home.
The greys are fat
with neglect and trip during ascent.
I stole money for their feed from my mother's purse.
The speckled ones are new:
still sore and stiff—fly only if nudged.
Father set the TV volume loud all day, every day.
My neighbour-turned-therapist says:
*Let it all go.*
I unlatch the coop
and with meditative flaps, they overcome
the sky. I sit on the terrace edge
retracing their flight
until the sun perches on the horizon
and the clouds turn rowdy—they all flutter
back like a panic attack.
Each of my pigeons is a racing homer;
fear always finds its way back home.
Erica Breen
I Learn to Count
I Learn to Count
My father’s hands were so big
he could hold four eggs in each one.
One by one, then by twos as my hands grew,
I placed the eggs
into the yellow wire basket, gently,
finding the lowest spot—
otherwise
they would roll down, smack
against each other.
If a hen was fluffed on the nest,
I would pull my sleeve over my hand,
sneak toward her back end.
Under the hot feathers—
a gathering
of round, warm treasure—
...seventy-eight,
seventy-nine. We counted
close to a hundred eggs, but we stayed
in a trance of now,
each egg,
each nest a moment—
slow dance
of harvest, heavy miracle—
the basket filled.
Alex Wong
The Night Egg
The Night Egg
*From Aristophanes*, Birds, *ll. 694-97*
First in the shapeless evergoing lap
of Darkness
Nyx
@tabthe Night
@tab@tabof the great black wing
bore an egg:
@taban egg of wind:
@tab@taba yolkless
ovum. After many turns
of time had swung around,
@tab@tab@tab@tab@tab@tabout from it comes
hatching
@tabEros
@tab@tabdrenched in hungry
yearning, flashing
golden wings at his back:
rushing as any wind:
@tab@tab@tab@tab@tablike any vortex.