In and out like a lion I hunt by morning
moon and freezer light, like what was seen
by men through fog on frozen floes.
You know sealers hunted in the Narrows?
I scoop out forgotten chicken thighs in shame,
pick blueberries off frost, look for wild
strawberries lost in margarine tubs. My hands,
Spring breaking ice apart, bread in cold soup.
The long and hungry month of March is here.
It’s all the same today, really, the price of cigarettes
being what it is. Learning how to live
alone, I appreciate the constants.
Like those who came before me,
I relish frugality, delight in the necessity
of self-preservation, freeze box-mix
pancakes for later, half-eaten by picky mouths,
syrup-wet backs, soaked so thoroughly
they never thaw. My pancakes died deep
in the freezer, stuck in the ice for months
before anyone noticed, next to the thyme.
Copyright © 2024 by Maggie Burton, Chores, Breakwater Books