Saturday, December 1, 2018

RYAN QUINN FLANAGAN


RYAN QUINN FLANAGAN

STRONG SILENT TYPE

The cashier at Zellers
was a real talker.

From the time we got there
she didn’t stop.
The line got longer
as she tried to be personable
with each customer.

When we got to the cash
we paid for Zantac
a case of water
and two scrapbooks
while the cashier told us she hated
scrapbooking
ever since her 85 year old grandmother
had a birthday
and she was tasked with constructing
a scrapbook for her.
My old lady engaged in light conversation
politely
as I stood silent
but smiled whenever she talked
at me.

Ah, the strong silent type,
she said
handing me the case
of water.

I couldn’t understand whether
I was being punished for being strong
or silent.





THIS IS HOW THE STONE AGE BEGINS

A few steps down the driveway I kick my foot about wildly.
It must look as though I am on fire when I am not.
There is a stone in my shoe that I cannot locate.
Digging into the underside of my foot with each step.
Most insufferable to a man on the take.
Yes, the money is all mine but I put it in unmarked envelopes
for myself to find.
Even greasing my palms with vegetable oil.
The corruption hearings more than ten centuries away.
And this is how the Stone Age begins.
Baby steps like sitting in a chair before it can be comfortable.
One single tiny stone.
Do you not realize whole office tower skylines will be constructed
of you one day, great statues to mystical gods
that fornicate with clouds?
We spend the day together, then I knock my shoe against
the side of the house.
Breaking up is the hardest part, even with all the trouble.
Now I walk just as anyone does.
I want my stone back.






BIKINIS OF DUNKIRK

The bikinis of Dunkirk
spill into the water
en masse.

Watching
and wading
less than twenty feet
from the
shore.

As lifeguards
come off duty
and enemy guns
sound off
like sand crabs

and beach towels
lay abandoned
like bodies
in the
sand.

RYAN QUINN FLANAGAN

RYAN QUINN FLANAGAN is a Canadian-born author residing in Elliot Lake, Ontario, Canada with his wife and many bears that rifle through his garbage.  His work can be found both in print and online in such places as: Evergreen Review, The New York Quarterly, Our Poetry Archive, Setu, Literary Yard, and The Oklahoma Review.

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