What Rough Beast | Poem for February 19, 2018

Sarah Caulfield
Some Kind of End Times

i.
Burn-out:
Noun. Definition:
Reduction of something to its basest level.
Secondary meaning: physical or mental collapse caused by overwork or stress.
Informal.
Phrasal country of origin: United States.

ii.
On the news, they’ve begun talking about nuclear strikes.
The threat of being called back into dirt is one I have begun contemplating,
Idly, with a kind of distant panic.
There are footsteps where there were once children in Hiroshima.
At strange moments of the day—folding laundry, queueing for coffee,
I think about the ribbons in their hair crumbling,
The way lungs might have folded in on themselves, rendered brittle.
Death playing shadow puppets, over and over, against a rising sun
And the word we picked for it was victory
But those were foreign children, and very far away, and it’s not a cautionary tale
until you’re choking on it.

And I think about how better poets have had better ways,
better words to gild the horror of the Earth we have built
but the lovers in Pompeii have never felt more distant.

Ashes to ashes, dust to dust: the devil is a white man in a white house.
It’s a silly sort of prayer but here goes:
Not now. Not yet. Can it wait?

iii.
All my friends are dying.
All of my friends are trying to keep themselves alive.
All my friends are sewing themselves up with cheap thread, saline leaking all over the shop,
and I’m making myself smaller in the hope angels will pass over my door.
They call it compassion fatigue.

We’re building man-traps in London town to catch the homeless out now.
After all, the only thing worse than the Little Match Girl is having to look her in the eyes.
We all know my government is standing on bodies, but that’s nothing new. Look at the buildings.
The backbone of this country is made of transatlantic spines and people are starving,
but they’re always starving, everywhere, and
I don’t have anything left to spare.

They’ve stopped showing Puerto Rico on the television.
No electricity, no news: we’re both being kept in the dark.
It has been over two thousand days since there was clean water in a city in Michigan,
but they don’t sound like me when they talk, so I’m not supposed to care.

iv.
My grandmother told me a story once, about someone in the family
who walked back out of the war camps to a brave new world, rendered lucky still to be in his body—
No, I don’t remember his name. She told me he never talked about what had happened.
Language had collapsed in on itself, a black hole, a wound is an absence in the world –
All they knew was he was scared of the dark, and that each and every night,
He would put on his coat, the creases in the shoulders worn familiar
as the touch of tongue to envelope, something that ought not to sting,
He would put it on, wait until the park lights were switched off for the night,
And step inside. Over and over, until he died,
He stood there, alone in the absence of light, stuck with the velvet licking of his own memory.
I don’t know if it helped, all that exposure.
Like I said, he never talked about it.

v.
There’s something else.
There’s always something else, some fresh crisis to sink my teeth into,
Only I don’t think I can keep doing this.
My gums ache. I’m swallowing down blood.
If this is some kind of end times, honey—
Meet me at the finish.
Just don’t wait for me to catch up.

 

Sarah Caulfield is the author of Spine (Headmistress Press, 2017). Her work has appeared in Lavender Review, Voicemail Poems, The Griffin, and The Mays (XXIV). She has lived in Poland and Germany, and currently lives in the UK. 

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What Rough Beast | Poem for February 18, 2018

Robert Farrell
November

The women ride out to the meadows
To dig through the middens.
Their hands are brown with mud.
They stoop like readymades.
With all the lawlessness of the law
Steel silhouettes of dogs were spotted
Standing in the field this morning.
A suicidal impulse held the nation.
The snows return then melt again.
The geese are left to feed on the grasses.

*

The children await their disposition
Homeless on the sidewalk,
Dozens of them laid out
Like tambourines and banjos.
The gigs suspended above them,
They sleep uneasy in the lamplight.
There is a flower that grows wherever
Pilgrims rest shoulder to shoulder.
The snows return then melt again.
The dogs are left to feed on their souls.

*

Unmanned by the situation
We forget to powder our wigs.
Now we must pay court to our masters
Unshaven and soiled.
We choose not to escape the banquet,
But remain before our hogget.
They will love us more, you tell me,
If our words are of the moment.
The snows return then melt again.
The ghosts are left to feed on our hearts.

 

Robert Farrell is the author of Meditations on the Body (Ghostbird Press, 2017). His poems have appeared in Posit, The Brooklyn Review, The Santa Fe Literary Review, Leviathan: A Journal of Melville Studies and elsewhere. Originally from Houston, Texas, he lives and works in the Bronx, where he’s a librarian at Lehman College, CUNY.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for February 17, 2018

Ana Fores Tamayo
My Mama’s Rice/El arroz de mi mamá

1

Los uniformes disputan, silenciosos.
Se voltean y me explican, avergonzados:
no queremos volver a verla, mujer,
ni a usted, ni a su mocoso hijo.
Piérdase en el vacío de la nada silenciosa,
Tome un autobús hacia el olvido.
Pero no repita nunca lo que nos ha dicho,
y tendrá su asilo.

Váyase ahora.

My mama’s rice is what I remember always.
Delectable, smelling like home, my refuge,
plants and vagaries surrounding memories.
Yet I huddle small, hugging air, forlorn to truth,
fondling recollections of better yesteryears,
of the sweet odor of boiling rice and yierbas.

Recuerda: el olor saturado dentro las esquinas de esa casa vieja
llena de juguetes, de música perdida
en las madrileñas zapateando un ritmo apasionado,
penetrando la naturaleza muerta,
los árboles danzantes con sus brizas
soplando sueños…

Y mi mamá perdida con los espíritus,
mi hijo, aguantado de mi mano,
solito, con miedo, huddling huddling
in the corner of that dusty room
and me, afraid of what’s to come.

But I remember my mama’s rice
and I dream nostalgia for
those fine white grains, glittering blue-gray pearls
tasting the gold of motherhood
protecting always, safeguarding angels
of the smallest halo…

I walk determined, my son’s small hand grasping mine,
toward that solitary bus taking me to heaven.
The bridge looms large.
Its necklace of bejeweled pearls flickering beads of light
against the black of a threatening sky,
the black of the day’s reality
always counterpointing my mama’s rice,
el arroz de mi madre eterna
guiándome a las delicias de un futuro azul,
de esa libertad en unas perlas de un puente luminoso
llevándonos hacia el futuro, my little son and me…

 

2

The uniforms negotiate, in secret.
They turn around and explain to me, embarrassed:
we do not want to see you here, ma’am,
neither you nor your bratty child.
Lose yourself in that void of silent nothings,
Take a bus to your oblivion.
But never repeat a word of what you’ve told us,
and you will have asylum.

Now go.

El arroz de mi mamá es lo que recuerdo, siempre.
Delicioso, con olor a casa, a mi hogar, a mi refugio,
plantas y caprichos rodeando mil recuerdos.
Sin embargo, me acurruco, abrazando el aire, abandonada sin verdad total,
acariciando los recuerdos de mis mejores tiempos de antaño,
del dulce olor de arroz hirviendo con herbs and spice.

Remember: the smell so saturated into crevices of that old home
filled with toys, with lost music
of the madrileñas tapping sultry rhythms,
penetrating its gentle still life,
its dancing trees with their breezes
blowing in dream sequences…

And my forgotten mother abandoned with her spirits,
my son, held tightly by my grip,
alone, afraid, acurrucado, acurrucado
en la esquina de esa habitación arrinconada
y yo, con miedo del por venir.

Pero recuerdo el arroz de mi madre
y sueño de nostalgia por
esos blancos granos, perlas brillantes pero pálidas,
saboreando el oro de la maternidad:
protegiendo siempre, amparando a los ángeles
con la aureola más estrecha …

Camino decidida, la pequeña mano de mi hijo sujetándome,
hacia ese solitario autobús llevándome al cielo.
El puente sobresalta imponente.
Su collar de perlas enjoyadas parpadean luminarias
contra el negro de un cielo amenazante,
lo oscuro de la realidad del día
siempre contrapunta con el arroz de mi mamá,
the rice of my eternal mother
guiding me to the delights of a blue future,
of that freedom in the pearls of a shining bridge
guiding us to our tepid future, mi hijito y yo…

 

Ana Fores Tamayo’s poems and/or photographs appear in Acentos Review, The Raving Press, Rigorous, and Frontera. She advocate for marginalized refugee families from Mexico and Central America.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for February 16, 2018

Devon Balwit
The Lessons of Dunkirk (The Movie)

Your fingers may plug the slug holes
of a gun, but the culverts of flesh, no,
the heart’s a right river through those.

Tea warms a lad, and toast and jam, a lady’s
lilt offering, but torpedoes sod all, sending
the lungs brimming beyond the saucer’s edge.

A man will do anything to live, lie, knock
down the weak, shatter glass with a gun butt, run
the dying a long way to escape their shadow.

Aloft, you can hear little, just propeller whir
and the rat-a-tat-tat of the turret gun, and
the sudden silence when the tank empties.

A general’s job is to stand at the edge and cut
a fine figure. He squints the compass rose, a
focus of glass, brave faced to the last, the last lad.

 

Devon Balwit is a writer/teacher from Portland, Oregon. Her poems of protest have appeared previously in What Rough Beast as well as in The New Verse News, Poets Reading the News, RattleRedbird Weekly Reads, Rise-Up Review, Rat’s Ass Review, The Rising Phoenix Review, Mobius, and more.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for February 15, 2018

Michele Lesko
Truth

She awoke awash in chills
the day that was all mourning.

She once-upon-a-time told them
the boy, who punched his locker

said, fuck you, and sauntered past
pinched white faces, was Truth.

Truth told it all in the instant his fist
put an end-stopped, final mark

on his sentence. He was sentenced
from birth to the fear on their faces.

This weight Truth bore, like a hum
behind his brain, was an everyday

ache. Another boy, who wrote
precisely what he was told

to write to get by, went slowly
blind inside from putting down

all his thoughts in tiny but perfect
letters. Mothers-fathers-coaches

didn’t suspect insurrection. White
light glared as this silent boy sat

among the brown people in a church
in the south. Parishioners in the parish

about to perish, not from the humid
passion of their pastor preaching

beneath a simple white steeple
but from the boy who came to rid

himself of humanity. Families there
were saved, baptized by the blood

of the lamb. Truth was shot down
dead on the day he lifted his eyes

to question the officer in charge
of a taillight out traffic stop.

The white boy, no one ever asked
why, carried out his plan with no sign

of protest. He never yelled fuck you.
No one questioned this boy who hid

his simmer inside his head. His pride
his heritage this same story was all

his to collect, compose, create
a morning, where nine crumbled

to the floor before the altar of our
God. He lives today and breathes

while others like him remain blanks
on the page. And her hollerin’ boy

Truth lays quiet beneath the dirt
of a churchyard like any other

filled with brown boys’ bodies
that lived loud in their forever

present-tense posture of protest.
She once held in her open arms
the bleeding heart of the matter.

 

Michele Lesko is the founding editor of IthacaLit. Her poems and short stories have appeared in The Southern California Review, The Pedestal Magazine, Anon, and other journals. She holds an MFA from Fairleigh Dickinson University and currently works as a teacher.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for February 14, 2018

Justin Shin
A Quiet Exit

Better be quiet
the fallen branches are no fools
they stay silent
and the doe hears
and knows well
the rough-hewn intricacies of sinewy roots
the fallen trunk torn open with lightning
boulders with mossy undersides
a watching-glass of crystal

a snap of twigs may sound
a pitch too dire
or some shuffling leaves
disturbed by no calm forest breeze
she will identify in an instant
the infringement
nervous, shuffling hands
emotions buried under miles of guilt
and jump away

but the night opts to remain silent
to sound no ominous warning
whilst he studies the doe down his shaft
its silver tip fording
the soft bands of moonlight

 

Justin Shin is a sophomore studying at the International School of Manila in the Philippines. He enjoys using literature as a tool to explore the many eccentric and beautiful facets of the world. He writes news articles frequently for the school publication Bamboo Telegraph. He also loves music.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for February 13, 2018

Terence Degnan
I tried to write a letter

to the NRA
but my letter wasn’t weapon enough
for them
to respect it

so I tried to take the NRA
to trial
for the murders
of children
but my lawsuit
wasn’t gun enough
for the judge to hear me out

so I tried to buy the NRA
with American money
but the money wasn’t soaked
in enough children’s blood
for them to be bought

so I tried to run for government
in the gun capital of the U.S.A
but the NRA
beat me to it

so I tried to get a doctor for every child
and a psychotherapist for every man
with the money the NRA turned away
but the doctors lost the nerve
and the men weren’t cured
and the NRA laughed in my face

so I went down to the NRA
and shot every person there
and they labeled me a terrorist
and when they dragged me away
I was saying something
about their own medicine
but who knows
I probably need a doctor
I shouldn’t own a gun

 

Terence Degnan is the author of Still Something Rattles (Sock Monkey Press, 2016) and The Small Plot Beside the Ventriloquist’s Grave (Sock Monkey Press, 2012). His work has appeared in Prime Number Magazine, The Other Herald, and The OWS Poetry Anthology, as well as in the anthology, My Apocalypse (Sock Monkey Press, 2012). His two spoken word albums, BC (2008) and Calling Shotgun (2010) can be found on iTunes and Spotify.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for February 12, 2018

Dave Conlin Read
The Outer Borough Colonel, Old Bone Spur

Having ordered a parade of his own,
Trump is transformed
from Putin’s Puppet,
to Kim’s Clone.

Now, we wonder…

Will he ask bids
for a new pyramid,
or coldly evict, then
re-brand Grant’s Tomb?

 

Dave Conlin Read publishes BerkshireLinks.com, and reviews concerts at Tanglewood. He lives in Lenox, MA.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for February 11, 2018

Marjorie Moorhead
Because an invitation…

Because I’m up before the dawn,
I see rosy clouds appear as sun breaks.
Because it is late November,

all is couched in a hazy cold moisture cluster;
festering, gathering, waiting for weight
to bring it down as snow.

Few leaves hanging on.
Most have hit the earth,
skittered and clattered dryly away.

Now tree skeletons stand tall and proud,
showing beautiful silhouettes
on a cold air screen.

Will they get a blanket?
How thick will it be?
A many snowflake’d quilt, joined in unique pattern.

Because I worry about such things
I think about the shoveling out,
and the shuttering in.

Because it seems like old school survival;
boots pulled over wool,
ear flaps, gloves, scarves,
tissues and hot soup at hand.

Will the frail and infirm survive?
To be warmed by Spring
and hear it’s song?
Because an invitation is on it’s way
for the hardy.

 

Marjorie Moorhead‘s poem “Starlight in My Pocket”  appeared in the HIV Here & Now project annual run-up to World AIDS Day in 2017. Her poem “Wandering the Anthropocene” is included in the anthology A Change of Climate (Independently published, 2017) edited by Sam Illingworth and Dan Simpson to benefit the Environmental Justice Foundation. Her poems will appear in the anthologies Birchsong: Poetry Centered in Vermont,  Vol. 2 (Blueline Press, 2018) and in the Opening Windows Fourth Friday Poets collection forthcoming from Hobblebush Press in 2018. Marjorie lives in New Hampshire near the Vermont border.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for February 10, 2018

Kathleen Hellen
When stars threw down their spears

—after Blake

Here’s a woman—102—(the oldest that we knew)
who fans herself with programs
of her thanks

the pace car leading
feathered caps,
buttons, badges

3.3 degrees above the average

For now at least—
we hitch our flags to wagons, quarter watermelon
drink sweet tea in gallons

warmer than
the normal, hotter than the record set
in ’36 —

we pledge allegiance. The color guard saluting
the children hula hooping. Later
firecrackers. Later

clouds like scattered sheep
The shearing of the season
The blackened sky that swallowed wheat

The moon sneaks up on sinew. Can you see?
the stars o, say,

the coldest winter coming

 

Kathleen Hellen is the author of Umberto’s Night (Washington Writers’ Publishing House, 2012), winner of the Jean Feldman Poetry Prize, and two chapbooks, The Girl Who Loved Mothra (Finishing Line Press, 2010) and Pentimento (Finishing Line Press, 2014). Her poems have appeared in journals including American Letters and Commentary, Barrow Street, The Massachusetts Review, New Letters, Prairie Schooner, The Sewanee Review, and others, as well as in Nasty Women Poets: An Unapologetic Anthology of Subversive Verse (Lost Horse Press, 2017). Her poems have been awarded the Thomas Merton poetry prize and prizes from the H.O.W. Journal and Washington Square Review.

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