Monday, 11 November 2024

Five Poems by John Sweet

 




distance w/out time 

 

 

but this is part of it, 

the immigrants in cages for the 

good of democracy, 

the dreamers arrested for what they write, 

for what they think, and then it 

turns out that we really aren’t  

that safe after all 

 

it turns out that the reasons I 

have for denying god are 

all i really own 

 

this one small gift for  

my children, 

and then the silent crush of 

fear 

 

 

 

upstate triptych 

 

 

     i.   cortland, late summer 

 

 

got off the interstate to avoid the traffic, 

thirty miles of dead grey roads through 

dead grey towns i never knew existed, 

my kids asleep in the back seat, sunlight 

like a shroud of broken glass against my  

                                                          skin 

 

wanted to be lost, 

but it was too late for that 

 

wanted to be home 

 

kept confusing the idea of locked doors 

                                                w/ safety 

 

kept closing my eyes  

against the rush of oncoming traffic 

 

 

 

 

     ii.   endicott, again 

 

 

woke up hungover & blind on the 

day i was fired and staggered  

to the bathroom to drink 

the faucet dry 

 

tasted blood 

tasted vomit 

 

considered the names of the saints 

 

remembered talking to you the 

                              night before 

 

laughing when you told me i was 

the only one who could save you 

 

how we’d crawled naked  

like animals 

to find each other in the darkness 

 

 

 

 

     iii.   waterloo, december 

 

 

sat there next to her in the  

laundromat parking lot w/ the heater on 

while her sister talked to the cops 

 

told them yr mother’s boyfriend had 

                              never touched her 

 

said she just wanted to go home 

and i counted out change for the dryer 

 

you looked for 

something better on the radio 

 

just kept raining like the idea of 

christ could somehow be washed away 

 

 

 

 

and did you think this was easy? 

 

 

flying, right? with his arms 

outstretched and the city 14 blocks below but 

not every child needs a father 

 

not every hand 

becomes a fist 

 

and she laughs, asks is that 

supposed to be profound? and then 

she passes the joint to her sister 

 

says she was there, saw him get up on 

the railing, saw his smile and 

she says it was beautiful 

 

says he’d been crazy for as long as 

she’d known him, 4th or 5th grade, and she says she 

fucked him once after a football game, back seat of her  

boyfriend’s car and then they’d left her there in the parking lot, made 

her walk home, and then she goes to the kitchen for  

another beer, and are we really alive here or  

are we just moving without purpose through time? 

 

shit 

 

all i know is that it’s always summer, 

always 11:30 at night, 

always 80 degrees in whatever 40-watt apartment 

we end up in, and there are always ghosts 

 

there is always regret, but 

never enough to make any difference 

 

never enough to keep the story from ending 

the exact same way every time 

 

 

 

 

for everyone who lost their way 

 

 

the names of all these party girls 

who have grown as old and bitter as myself, and 

did we ever actually have any fun? 

 

taste of puke and of blood 

 

BTO on a cheap radio in the motel room and 

i think i was married by this point, 

but only for a short while 

 

i think i had already taught my 

parents the nature of true disappointment, 

or maybe i remember my father at 

the door with a 12 pack and a 

bottle of tequila 

 

maybe the past ends up being as 

uncertain as the future 

 

keep moving in either direction 

long enough, and your story ends up 

having no meaning at all 

 

 

 

 

the poet w/out hands, w/out a tongue 

 

 

sat there wanting to 

write something 

 

sat there thinking about 

all of the things i'd said to you 

and all of the things i'd 

kept to myself 

 

knew the priests would 

end up devouring the children 

 

knew the idea of democracy 

was just one more weapon 

for the rich to beat the 

poor with 

 

had a song going through 

my mind but i 

couldn’t remember the words 

 

was watching it snow 

outside an upstairs window 

 

listened to the sounds the 

animals made as they starved  

to death by slow degrees




John Sweet sends greetings from the rural wastelands of upstate NY. He is a firm believer in writing as catharsis, and in compassionate nihilism. His poetry collections include A FLAG ON FIRE IS A SONG OF HOPE (2019 Scars Publications) and THERE'S ONLY ONE WAY THIS IS GOING TO END (2023 Cyberwit).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

No comments:

Post a Comment