C Waltz
I do not think we have a settler inside the room
The light loosens itself from the grasp
    the light slowly opens
An empty wooden chair is pulled out from a table
    its surface entirely eaten by one large kettle
Here is a housewife complete with child, apron, mop
    water boiling or rushing up river
In the close-up of her face
the handsome woman has                fixed her eyes
A kitten winking
    to its twice-large shadow
Red River Jig
We cannot recognize or name these
electronic instruments. The listener’s body
lodges into the expected fray
                                    It is the ocean
or the sea. I’ve paused
while the horizon is dipping. The jutting fin
one shade darker than the water
It swims through
                                    A priest is walking
with a wooden cross over his shoulder 
Whose luggage is this?

Jessi MacEachern lives in Montréal, QC, where she teaches English literature. Her poetry has been published or is forthcoming in Touch the Donkey, Poetry Is Dead, Vallum, MuseMedusa, Canthius, PRISM and CV2. Her debut poetry collection is A Number of Stunning Attacks (Invisible Publishing, 2021).

