SurVision Magazine |
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An
international online magazine that
publishes Surrealist poetry in English.
Issue
Nine
S. C. Flynn Where the Unborn Are
I ride the world to
the end of the line,
a fragile thing under a hard metal sky, hearing the future say the gods no longer need us and heaven still costs what each can pay. It's calling us on, but who knows where; when all the questions are answered, the problem still remains, a child crying forever in the night. The Good Things A
grey and heavy Tuesday
sprawls to the horizon; the window might open onto a courtyard filled with colour and life, but never does. I want to drive a nail deep into the clouds and hang a bright canvas across the sky – a crinkled hymn to day and night – but try as we might, we'd always know that the moon is just a lump of wood, the sun a crumbling dried flower and the stars only shiny little stones hanging by loops of string from the spindly branches of a tree. We see ourselves as reflections smudged in the back of a spoon, two changing people in the same clothes each day, so we rush on like open razors, cutting open all the things that could have held us while we grab a feeling or two from a book as we pass by. Now there's noise in the courtyard, but the spoon needs washing and the brittle sun slowly drops a petal. S. C. Flynn was born in Australia to Irish parents, and now lives in Dublin. His poetry appears in Cyphers, Strukturriss, Bealtaine, The Waxed Lemon, Drawn to the Light, and Beir Bua. |
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