Two Poems by Zoë Brigley
Circle Poem
I also live alone, though
I exist among many,
grind sequins with mortar &
stone, have eaten earth from a yogurt pot.
There are possums in the garden that come carrying
the moon in their paws,
dropping it in the lake, where on occasion we might
see an egret,
still & white & shaped
like a microphone stand. It leans dipping its beak like
a knife-blade into
the circle of water long after moonrise. I live
in a boomtown, where all the time they are shifting
blocks around, never clear where I stand, but
I flag down cars with the flag of my dress, while
passers-by shout: That looks great on you. I am loose
here: not loose like a dress spun & stretched
on high heat, but loose like a silver earring when
the clasp won’t quite close & one day it falls in the grass
somewhere. I have lived in
cookie cutters, shiny as chrome on a 1942 Pontiac streamliner;
lived in
the small white berry
of poison sumac; or in the closed
anemone exposed out of water, angry in its sac. I am forced
into wire & cables, where
there exists a solar system but not like our own,
our sun unique,
because it is alone without companions.
More common
in the night sky are
two or more stars that orbit each
other, you & I held together by gravity. I live in a telescope
pointing up, where
some pairs are so close they start
to become one: the spiral disk of the white dwarf reels
in a red giant
& blasts between them brilliant light.
Imprint
Darling, I’ll never know what love is for, until the night
I undress before you. I’ll wear nothing but
my bronze hair & the prettiest ribbons. When the drapes
fall down I’ll be gold in the firelight, luminous
the skin. What if I said that I dreamed you (if
you ever existed)? Imprint, imago behind
my eye: a man, strong & gentle enough to hold a wild
creature like me: vixen, sharp-toothed & sniffing
the air. I will give myself up to your voice if you tell me:
be still. When you put your hands on me, I am still.
Zoë Brigley has three Bloodaxe poetry collections, all PBS Recommendations. She has also published a collection of non-fiction essays, Notes from a Swing State (Parthian), and recently the Broken Sleep chapbook, Aubade After a French Movie. She is editor of 100 Poems to Save the Earth (Seren), with Kristian Evans.