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YOUR CART

7/12/2020

POETRY: AMY LEBLANC

YERSINIA PESTIS IN ALBERTA
During the bubonic plague, Thieves’ Oil (a blend
                 of clove, lemon, cinnamon, eucalyptus, and rosemary) 
was placed on hands, ears, temples, feet, and inside of
beak-like masks to avoid catching the plague.

​Clove:
 
It will be manageable at first.
 
a brief tremor in the arms and legs,
squirrels will drop from electrical wires
and robins will lose their voice.
 
The pain will be no brighter
than a flickering candle
 
at first.
 
 
 
Lemon:
 
A man on a podium
will tell you not to worry.
 
The men behind will nod.
 
They will post signs
telling you to exercise
reasonable precautions.
 
 
 
Cinnamon:
 
You will sink your body
beneath bathwater.
 
You can ignore the
darkness in the sides
of your ribcage. You cannot
avoid the shadows on
your fingertips.
 
 
 
Eucalyptus:
 
It will get better
before it gets worse.
 
To contain the infection,
gathering in groups
will be prohibited.
 
The tremors will return
and they will be violent.
 
You must always wear
long pants to keep
the insects from your ankles.
 
 
 
Rosemary:
 
If you find dead birds,
leave them be.
Avoid physical contact--
it can spread
through saliva of the infected.
Wrap black thread around fingertips
to keep the sickness contained:
 
Stay home,
live alone,
and abstain.

Amy LeBlanc is an MA student in English Literature and creative writing at the University of Calgary and Managing Editor at filling Station magazine. Amy's debut poetry collection, I know something you don’t know, was published with Gordon Hill Press in March 2020. Her novella "Unlocking" will be published by the UCalgary Press in their Brave and Brilliant Series in 2021. Her work has appeared in Room, PRISM International, and the Literary Review of Canada among others. She is a recipient of the 2020 Lieutenant Governor of Alberta Emerging Artist Award.

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