Literature Poetry Sean O'Connell

I don’t keep blood in my beer

I used to go dancing at the Painted Lady

I used to go dancing in the afternoon lazily drinking youth and afraid of nothing but afraid of nothing except missing cheap oysters

When the beer I tasted really mattered and how I tasted the beer I tasted really mattered

When it mattered that the appetizer pair with its aperitif

And because I didn’t care I didn’t really care — when did I care enough?

Contre elle et lui, Zephyrus donnerai sa pluie

You see I didn’t care that I cared that the coffee I drank seemed to matter

Didn’t I care that it seemed to matter?

I cared that a sourdough round was made from scratch

And was it ever enough?

What is enough kneeling before the condo metropolis; before artisanal pickles; before the ketamine snorted off iPhone cases

Le vent d’ouest furieux est le dieu du ciel vindicatif

Is it enough for salvation to think in syllables gazing at graffiti or the bar fights bloodying my beer?

There is no blood in a drool of leaves speckling early winter’s pavement while wheels rhythmic skip hums to the screech of streetcar tracks

And then I didn’t care that I didn’t care enough about avoir or être because I didn’t stare long enough with enough longing for her stare

Enough along her arms, pale and bared, but nothing I really want as much as her stare

Le vent d’ouest répondra-t-il à la prière d’un buveur?

Still I want the snow that’s blue not white in the shadows cast by sun-light

And I want the snow beneath my shoes spreading the web & vein of dead leaves across slushy grass while my snow-blind eyes see an aura: vermillion; fuchsia; lilac

Now I want the wind in my hair

Now I know I want to declaim: “Zephyrus strokes my hair” and I want to know that I want the west wind in endless escape

But I don’t want blood in my beer

 

Sean O’Connell is a 30-year old resident of Tkaronto. He lives with schizoaffective disorder. His poetry and nonfiction work have previously appeared in Plenitude Magazine and the Queen’s Quarterly.

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