Meagerbird and Boy

Ray Succre is an undergraduate currently living on the southern Oregon coast with his wife and son. His poems have been published in journals such as AestheticaPoets and Artists, and Pank as well as in many others internationally. His novels Tatterdemalion (2008) and Amphisbaena (2009), both through Cauliay, are widely available in print. Other Cruel Things (2009), an online collection of poetry, is available through Differentia Press. Visit his blog.

Meagerbird and Boy
By Ray Succre

The plastic bath-float of Meagerbird had snapped.

"Meagerbird is his favorite," my wife told me.

Chipped fragments had become caltrops in carpet,

and a sliced foot had reached into wee-screeching notes.

"He's cried for two hours now, but not from the cut."

"I'll fix Meagerbird," I said, and there was an attempt,

but take her apart and she burst, then the spring

would not set, the choke was clogged, and Meagerbird

was destroyed.


I now drive to the toy pavilion, walk by toyish baubles.

Spongebob is discolored, faded, motionless, dying.

Hot Wheels are hazardous throat-chokes, and vanish,

and most dolls are the work of role stamps.


In utero, he heard me say through the belly:

"Basking water-boy driving an egg, kick to the voice,

veer to the music, tra la la."


Meagerbird sings as well, though not today,

and so I flit and hop, finding his replacement

in plentiful supply.


 

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