Poems by Moira Magneson

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King Fire

by Moira Magneson

From Canary Fall 2021

Along with gray foxes, quail, mule deer, and coyotes, Moira lives on a parcel of clay-red earth in the Sierra foothills. An ephemeral creek threads through her land, a reminder of the nature of impermanence.

I tramp the dead
dry creek bed
boots sinking

into ash.
What is
holy here?

There are no
visible bones—
I must be

breathing in their dust—
no bodies,
neither squirrel scramble,

nor crow caw,
or flashing white
rump of bounding deer.

No silver minnow
or jumping frog.
No skink slipping

in underbrush. No
bird or leafsong
Only this

congregation of ghosts,
blackclacking fir
and broken

oak bowing
before a blue
unblinking eye.




Owling

by Moira Magneson

From Canary Spring 2022

The naturalist took us owling
          at twilight up in the green hills
                    of American Canyon. I knew

the place—a deep cleft in the land     horse
          stables     dairies. We stopped
                    at a stand of eucalyptus. A fine

rain coming down. I could hear the river
          of cars running parallel on the interstate—
                    swoosh          swoosh          swoosh

We were told a Great Horned owl lived
          nearby high in the oily     bushy     menthol.
                    I scanned the treetops.

The man pulled a little bundle from his trouser
          pocket—a field mouse tethered
                    with a long leash of string.

Anchored to a heavy stone
          the tiny creature took off
                    scurrying to the end of her world

where she stopped short     quaking. Our guide
          giddy with the certain telos
                    of his design     the owl descending

from his perch     a terrible winged minotaur. But there
          on the earth     tangled in twine     the bird also
                    suffered     whirlwind gathered up

with leather gloves     metal band crimped
          on his leg     identified     accounted for     let go.
                    I turned     walked back to the truck     got in

huddled on the passenger side     waited
          and wondered for all our lives—what marvels
                    we were     wild     innocent     damned.




road trip

—for Mo DeCoursey

by Moira Magneson

From Canary Summer 2021

we’d had enough of it     your dad
            a sack of bones    mine a floating fine
                        particulate snowing on Los Angeles

weyward sisters we fled our dead and dying
            left that quaking world behind    flew
                        up the coast in the old Dodge Dart

blue Naugahyde seats stacked with boating
            gear & books    the Gipsy Kings' guitars
                        wailed on the radio    you rolled

a joint    we smoked it to the butt
            cut our losses with each toke
                        lit up into late afternoon

giddy    we laughed at the great
            cosmic joke    morphine drips    bedpans
                        spattered in bile & shit & bits

of lung    we'd seen the cells' mad savaging
            our fathers come undone
                        anything was possible

strung out along the pavement the wheel-flung
            roadside promenade    creatures' lives interrupted
                        in their crossing

for the next 100 miles we snapped
            photos of ourselves stopped beside the slaughter—
                        possums mice a brindled cat the flattened

stink of skunk a rat without a tail a fox
            an owl a rattlesnake a hawk    the long
                        stilled cacophony of howl & song—

what kind of daughter was I? where had I gone wrong?

the sun dropped behind the hills
            one last shot you begged    I shook my head
                        no, this was too much misery

but you insisted    swerved onto the shoulder
            & I stepped out once more    this time
                        to an oily blackened mass    impossible

to tell what it had been    yet I lay down    closed
            my eyes    let my fingers sink in    traced the blown
                        gone body    smashed bone & fur & skin

a fly’s bright buzz criss-crossed my eye    padded
            the pillow of my cheek    strange tenderness
                        in the picture you took I am asleep

head tipped back to the black
            dark matter    such utter
                        ravaged formlessness

your voice called from far beyond
            we've got to go    c'mon
                        & I awoke    eyes opened

to the last surrendered light    stood up    brushed
            off the gravel & the grass    walked to the car
                        climbed in & we drove north

astonished    forsaken    windows rolled down
            to the sea    FM station fading in and out
                        the night road's unraveling melody




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