Poetry: Selections from Sean Meggeson
so, where are we?
what are we listening to?
is there a word
for the sound
of frogs
coming alive
in the spring?
is there a way
to explain
they sound
more like
chickens?
these questions
make me
feel connected
to a oneness.
ok,
the cosmos.
like we’ll never die,
or when we do,
there’ll be no fear,
just a croaking
death song
more like
the bark of
hungry muntjacs.
What If Boredom
What if boredom were—
get this—the voice
of self-love?
I retched, too.
I, like you,
have something
to retch.
Wild foxes
jump, blue
herons alight
silently alright.
But the soap in the
soap dish remains.
Who’s gonna complain?
John
Berryman (r.i.p.)
wrote:
“Life, friends,
is boring.
We must not
say so.”
Fuck,
say so!
You, me, him.
All the Johns.
Let me give you
a bottomless cup
as if to help.
Shane Ferguson
Sorry, do I know you?
Your name rings a bell—
assuming it’s your name.
Seriously—
sometimes
your name—
it’s not real.
You’re born without it—
catch it later in the eye.
Sorry, do I know you?
your name sounds—
something in the syllables—
says you were once adored—
like a tractor loves a field—
like a father chiefs his smokes—
waiting for a kid to do something.
Sorry, yes—
your name’s in the air.
Says it all—
Oh—
a gentle limp?
Cadent, s.o.b.
Where you going?
dog
bounces along
with a missing paw
asking a dreamer
to remember
a present
absence
lost paw is
fawther
the dog’s bark
is a love
sound
doggie!
wake up!
yes, love
(for which dreams
and poems
try to account
for its loss)
Sean Meggeson lives in Toronto, Canada, where he works as a psychoanalytic psychotherapist. He has written and lectured on such topics as Lacan & James Joyce, neurodiversity, and alternative rock. Sean recently has had poems in A Thin Slice of Anxiety, Scud, Scab, Stink Eye, and others. He had two poems in the Spring, 2024 issue of Blaze Vox.
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