January 2026
image by Eric Prouzet

Poetry
Three Poems
By Sean Thomas Dougherty
The Machinist
The foreman says we’re lucky to have light
at all. The fuse blew again. We set up
by instinct in the dark, by the ghost of a song
we once danced to in a bar called Love
Don’t Live Here Anymore.
My father taught me a yearning for labor:
how to find beauty in a drill-press, how light
can live in the cracks of callused hands.
He was a quiet man. He never said “I love
you,” but he taught me a minor tune
about a welder who married his flame
through temp jobs, graveyard shifts, work
that breaks the back but not the wages.
I’ve kissed men who tasted like blood
& cigarettes, who traced maps on my back
with fingers that knew the language of scars.
There’s a boardwalk gypsy who said my palms
read like no one’s ever done me good,
that I was married to the machinery’s noise.