Seán Griffin
THE DISTANCE BETWEEN THESE WORDS
I put my lips to the hole in your gut that’s freely giving out
sips of your wine, and I don’t taste the smack tart of the blue
collar berries, that robust flavor is diluted by whatever it was you put
in your veins, similar to what the docs can’t give you even though
they’ve operated to remove your gallbladder, kidney, etc., etc. it was
a through and through but it took its share of you, and I wonder
if you’ll feel hollow if you pull through. I put my index finger
into the wound and wiggle. though I don’t know how much roomier
you are now. though you must have felt some empty before considering
you added so much to your body. we’re all just bodies looking for love,
but you settled for warmth trickling up under your skin, the kind
that leaves faster than a person, taking its heat and yours too.
is our vintage watered down? are all the addicts in our family
pissing in the vat? have we run out of blackberries or dandelions?
has the crop been eaten by aphids and slugs? (your great) gramps said he was on
the toilet at the air base when they tested the atom bomb. said it messed up
his sperm and referred to us as the evidence. who am I in all this family
scrivener or a whore for a story? we haven’t been as close as the guy who got you
two millimeters - the distance between the bullet’s penetrating path
and your arterial spray. two millimeters between a slow one step out
of twelve, shuffling hand after hand along two beams a third - rate
gymnast, and a Dionysian fountain
Seán Griffin received an MFA in Creative Writing from Manhattanville College. Seán's writing has appeared in The Southampton Review, Selcouth Station Press, Impossible Archetype, Dust Poetry Magazine, Sonic Boom, and Cathexis Northwest Press, with poetry in The Mud Season Review, Mineral Lit Magazine, and The Hellebore forthcoming. Seán teaches writing at Concordia College of New York, is an editor for Inkwell Literary Journal, and lives in New York with three dogs.