Flying Is Not A Fear Of It

October 25, 2020

 

It will regret such gentle restraint, remorse
is always a day behind. It hunches, invisibly —
like a sick sparrow’s releasing body,

cracked beak, marble eyes, feathers spineless —
but can’t be unseen. There is no flight
from here, just splinters of fleeing.

Everywhere is life. Bodies bounce like chicks
against unexpected windows, discarded
flesh hardens in a bowl. Plugholes

bubble, flush, decamp down drains in joyous
dereliction. Baptismal third eye.
Mornings plummet.

Here, two fists of fumbling wings —
unspeakable children — dropped.

 

 

Maeve McKenna

Maeve McKenna lives in Sligo, Ireland. Her poetry has been placed in several international poetry competitions and published in Mslexia, The Cormorant, The Galway Review, Boyne Berries, MadSwirl, Sonder Magazine, Skylight47 and widely online. She is working towards her first collection of poetry.

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