Poetry from Patrick Sweeney

Old man seated in a chair with a balding head and reading glasses. Books are stacked behind him and he's writing on a piece of paper.

for Katie

by the glow of the cigarette she bummed, Madam Marie read her palm

overcoming the limitations of Etch-A-Sketch with a ball-peen hammer

I’ve given up on the idea of ever bending a spoon with my mind

the gray green Atlantic rollers on the way to my father’s first wave

Fuller’s Earth

her thumb print 

next to mine

the staggering odds he was deifying depended on a simple utterance

foreman berating Snot-rocket at the work site

bird migration

Hitchcock rushes to board before the closing doors

of the bus in my consciousness

three fairy ‘glees’ for the soul of Jack Kerouac

he came out in the heat to pick a leaf up off the lawn

her dead son’s shoeshine box

the footrest

size 9

Governments of this overheated world, ashamed before astral travelers

2 thoughts on “Poetry from Patrick Sweeney

  1. “I’ve given up on the idea of ever bending a spoon with my mind”

    Seldom do lines, poetic or prose, stab the mind. But this did me. By that line, and the remainder of the poem, you’ve moved me deeply. Thank you.

    Best wishes, from Brooks Lindberg.

  2. Thank you, Brooks, I appreciate your close reading. It means a lot.

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