Poetry from Fhen M.

G. Bragolin’s Crying Boy

G. Bragolin’s The Crying Boy

His hair was tousled dark brown,

his lips downturned.

All houses burned to the ground,

these mass-produced prints of a painting remained.

He was weeping as he ran from his home;

his papa was on fire holding a weapon.

The heated argument sparked when she 

told him to take the exam for the nth time;

he said he was a loggerhead.

Diablo or DJ is the crying boy,

a tear streaming down his orange cheek.

NOTE

On September 5, 1985, The Sun reported an Essex firefighter claiming that copies of The Crying Boy survived house fires unscathed. By November’s end, the paper’s readers were burning the prints en masse fueled by the painting’s growing curse reputation. David Clarke, a journalist, says the claim that the boy was Diablo didn’t emerge until 2000 in Tom Slemen’s book.

SHORT BIOGRAPHY
Fhen M. studied Writing in the Discipline, The Literature of the Philippines, and The Literature of the World at Eastern Visayas State University. His work has been featured in various publications, including the Waray poem “Uyasan” in Pinili: 15 Years of Lamiraw, and English poems like “Lighthouse,” “Seaport,” “Barbeque Stalls along Boulevard,” and “Tetrapod” in Poetica anthology by Clarendon House. Other publications include “Outside the Block Universe” in About Time: A Coming-of-Age Poetry Anthology by Red Penguin Books, and a poem in Flora/Fauna Anthology by Open Shutter Press. He also submitted Waray verses, including “Duha nga mga pagtug-an” (“Two Confessions”), to the 5th Lamiraw Creative Writing Workshop in 2008, with notable panelists like David Genotiva, Merlie Alunan, and Victor Sugbo.

One thought on “Poetry from Fhen M.

  1. Pingback: Synchronized Chaos’ Second April Issue: A Chorus at the Threshold | SYNCHRONIZED CHAOS

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *