A bottle blonde in Tacoma screams your name while having drunken sex with a stranger. You'll be okay. Search parties themselves have gotten lost and with only a sleeve of stale Saltines in the bread box. Add Comment A moment ago, in a flicker of pique, with a wave of the hand, I dispersed them. Glorious birds, now they are back, gold talons wrapped, roosting. Glorious birds, high on a wire, spearing the nits in their feathers. Donal Mahoney, a native of Chicago, lives in St. Louis, MO. He is the son of Irish immigrants, which explains why there is no "d" at the end of his first name. Pronounced with a long "o," "Donal" is Gaelic for Daniel. It was his father's choice. This name caused his son considerable consternation in grammar school as he had to explain to nuns on the first day of class why he could not spell his own name The moon holds your frame And silhouettes you And I see it From the corner of my eye From my diseased And dying window On a miserable July 31st Drunk as Grandpa on VJ Day And it sustains me For tonight For tomorrow For Kingdom Come John Tustin's work has appeared in various literary magazines and online journals, including Poem, The Camroc Press Review, and The Medulla Review. He has two perfect children and a job that is slowly killing him. | Poetry
"A poet looks at the world the way a man looks at a woman." ArchivesSeptember 2011 Categories |
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