Tuesday, January 1, 2019

RYAN QUINN FLANAGAN



RYAN QUINN FLANAGAN

FOR A MOST PORTLY WOMAN

in the dashing overboard night
in the common altitude of airport bathrooms
on horseback of no horse, I heard you coming
tuning the transistor to fingers
Appalachian ballads crawling down the avenues
vomitoriums to suspense and travesty
surge protectors riding hurricanes into the wall
bad breath speak for good views
around this most stationary spear-hunted moment
you climbed in my mouth
to make our
evening
wet.








PLAYING GOD

It was walking along Bernick Drive
all those years ago
myself in miniature, walking my bike
back to the house
with the chain dislodged
and drooping,
it was pockets full of rocks and box forts and summer
when I noticed some other kid
a little older
sitting there on the sidewalk
with a magnifying glass
burning ants into the pavement
with the sun.

I stopped and watched for a moment.
As he located the sun, positioned the magnifying glass
and waited.

It didn’t take long.
The ants would begin to smoke.
Circling in panic, then die.

The kid looked up and smiled at me:
it’s easy, wanna try?

I shook my head no
and walked on.

If there is a god or ever was, this would be him:
some sadistic bastard with a magnifying glass
putting us all through our paces
simply for his amusement.
Some murderous wretch with freckles
smoking us out with impunity.

But at the time I could not see that.
I still disliked the other kid for doing what he was doing
but didn’t know why.

When i got home

I flipped my bike over in the driveway
and fixed the chain.

The oil on my hands
washed away under the water spigot
at the side of the house.







CONTACT

She screams
from the other dimension
and I can hardly hear her

just the soft whisper
of thinning hair

and I yell back
across the heaving
multitude

into a thimble
too small

for

drinking.

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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