What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 03 23 20 | Candice Louisa Daquin

Candice Louisa Daquin
Isolation in the Time of Covid-19

if the act is on, full wattage
everyone sees a together girl, straight backed by taut strings
oh the puppet master pulls
them tightly in compensation for internal sag
they see a girl who has checked all the boxes;
education, polish, spit and shine, big smile, combed hair, thighs together
they see what they want to see
just as we read the truth and speak a lie
who wants to know the inside? The fight beneath?
Maybe at 18. When we still have patience, and time, and youth and romance
thinking it lovely to talk of emotions and breakage and pain
the beauty of those things when safe from death
edging closer, every year, less tolerance
until even your therapist has a break-down and can’t listen anymore
Covid-19 keep your distance? Aren’t we already alienated and disregarded?
She wants someone to listen, she wants someone, she wants to stop
this hole within her from growing out of control and taking her over
she wants to speak her truth to someone who gives a damn
it’s almost like wishing to have perky tits again and a hymen
it’s almost like hoping at the dinner table for love instead of silence.
She used to fake it really well, used to know all the ways of getting clean and squeaky
People are kind to children and pretty youth
Unkind to those who are mentally ill and grow old in their despair
old before your time, before you stopped wanting to be wooed and still wanting to wear
tight clothes and push up bras, just because you can.
Now she understands why middle aged women read romance novels
or hate and never do
the combat of wanting to be desired and knowing it’s not going to
ever again, they only like those little girls in tiny clothes
whose bodies are barely formed
are you bitter? Are you scorned? The world belongs to men
because they stop loving at a certain age and women
hate each other especially the peachy ones, who remind them of
what they’ll never get back.
The fight beneath, the bitchy office manager who used to tut beneath her breath
every time she walked past in her best blue heals
she had a good heart then and it hurt to be treated so
now she knows the meaning of
the loss in their eyes
but she still wants to be desired
is she going to turn into one of those sad ole gals who keeps wearing too tight jeans
hanging out at less and less popular places in hope?
Or will her heart shrivel and dry like a match burning its sulfur
hardly holds its original form
just the dark wood left, stained by flame
never to be struck
again.
She would like to think someone would
love her at any time, for more than whether she has loosening skin or
sagging bits, she has heard this is something men point out unkindly in bed
she’d probably sock them if they did, and bite something off
who the fuck has the right?
It fills her with a fresh hell to imagine
how they think they’re entitled
but her young self will remind her; it’s we who let this happen
dear wolf
we lay ourselves down when they tell us we’re not worthy
and we either let ourselves vanish
or we stop believing we can be
desired for more than the price of our skin
imagine us hanging like pieces of meat
dear wolf
waiting for the flies to obviate our claim
to be equal or good enough
whilst they, rotund, graying, flacid
rule the world or pretend to
we give life, we carry the future
are we going to let this be or
become wild, something untamed and furious
with the thirst of a girl wanting to give her entire heart
and throw it into the furnace
watch it burn with all that you want
this love, this need, this impossible desire
even as your body dries and says; I am done
you’re never done, you bring life, you bring longing
within you is a timeless heart.
She wants you to know
she may seem withered to you or not
as once she was, but she needs as much as ever
that desire, so much so she may climb out of
of her falling skin and become
a butterfly in reverse, going underground
where in darkness nobody can tell
then it’s all about the beat of life
that eternal drum
and anyone can play
as long as they join
beating their need against stretched leather
in the ancient way before we invented
exclusion and condemnation
when those wisest and most sought
were not children
but their bright eyed elders
still with the pulse
of hunger inside them.

Candice Louisa Daquin is the author of the poetry collections A jar for the jarring (lulu.com, 2016), The bright day is gone child and you are in for the dark (lulu.com, 2016), Illusions of existing (The Feathered Sleep Press, 2016), Sit in fever (lulu.com, 2016), and Pinch the Lock (Finishing Line Press, 2017). With Christine E. Ray, Kindra M. Austin, and Rachel Finch, she co-edited We Will Not Be Silenced (Indie Blu(e) Publishing, 2018), an anthology of poetry inspired by #MeToo. She also edited, with Hallelujah R. Huston, the anthology SMITTEN: This Is What Love Looks Like (Indie Blu(e) Publishing, 2019). Having immigrated to America two months after 9/11, she has lived in the Southwest ever since. Online at www.thefeatheredsleep.com

SUBMIT to What Rough Beast via our SUBMITTABLE site.

If you enjoyed today’s poem and you value What Rough Beast, consider making a donation to Indolent Books, a nonprofit poetry press.




What Rough Beast | Poem for March 22, 2020

Catherine Gigante-Brown
Mi Cuba

For mi abuelita, Consuelo Calves, who died April, 2003, in Cuba

On the rooftop bar of the Hotel Inglaterra
Ricardo sings
in heavily-accented English,
not el sons, mambos,
or the bittersweet ballads
of his country,
but the longing for another.
Scattered about
are newfound friends:
a married couple from New York,
a man from Texas,
two more from Louisiana,
human contraband
defying the embargo.
One has una abuela vieja,
an old grandmother,
wasting away in Playa Marinaeo,
her spine frail as a bird’s,
yet with an embrace of iron.
Another desires
the pepper of smoky-sweet
Monte Cristos on his tongue,
and the others,
the tang of jiniteras.

Sipping mojitos,
ron e coca
(with Tropicola, not Coca Cola, por favor)
and cervezas
as Ricardo cradles
his battle-scarred guitar
like a weapon,
the words of John Lennon
bring tears to their throats
which they choke back
with alcohol.
Imagine there’s no countries
It isn’t hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for…

My Cuba is beautiful.
My Cuba is kind.
My Cuba is hungry.
My Cuba is not
Castro’s failed Communism
or clandestine Capitalism.
My Cuba is right here,
right now,
on the rooftop
of Havana’s Hotel Inglaterra,
not a place of politics
but of people.
Un pais del gente.
A place of people and song.
And of hope.

My Cuba. Mi Cuba.

Catherine Gigante-Brown is the author of the novels The El (2012), The Bells of Brooklyn (2017), Different Drummer (2015), and Better than Sisters (2019), all published by Volossal. Her poems have appeared in RavishlyArt & Understanding, and Downtown Express, among other journals, as well as in the anthologies Eternal Snow: A Worldwide Anthology of One Hundred Twenty Five Poetic Intersections with Himalayan Poet Yuyutsu RD Sharma (Nirala Publications, 2017), edited by David B. Austell and Kathleen D. Gallagher, and the Brownstone Poets 2018 Anthology (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2018), edited by Patricia Carragon. Gigante-Brown is a lifelong Brooklynite.

SUBMIT to What Rough Beast via our SUBMITTABLE site.

If you enjoyed today’s poem and you value What Rough Beast, consider making a donation to Indolent Books, a nonprofit poetry press.




What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 03 22 20

Alex Gurtis
Off the Grid During the Beginning of the Pandemic

Life was pine forest and lakes.
Our isolation was another name
for a cracking sea wall
holding back the surging tide.

Campers still exchanged
pizza and stories around
a campfire. No cell service meant
no rising death counts. We
didn’t know the president
was tested, nor that the

stock market jumped off the roof
of the exchange, dashing its brains
on the horns of the bull below.
Our only sign of dissonance was falling
asleep to the sound of howitzers
firing live ammunition at the moon.

An elderly man told us
the National Guard was training
for emergency situations
as we shared blackberries that
tasted bitter and stained

our lips. Around the nightly fire,
I watched a bird’s nest bounce
in the wind until the branch
landed inside the Big Dipper.

That same wind picked leaves off
dying trees, releasing them with a kiss.
Their yellow bodies looked like they
were hiking up a mountain to pray.

All was well until one day we woke
up to squirrels tearing our bags,
stealing our food like newscast of

two women punching each
other at a grocery store
while a thin man steals
their carts. That day panic

picked up the picnic table and ran
leaving us short of breath, hungry.

Alex Gurtis is an Orlando, Florida based poet. His work has appeared in Zephyr, StoryTeller Magazine, and the Garfield Lake Review.

SUBMIT to What Rough Beast via our SUBMITTABLE site.

If you enjoyed today’s poem and you value What Rough Beast, consider making a donation to Indolent Books, a nonprofit poetry press.




What Rough Beast | Poem for March 21, 2020

Ronda Piszk Broatch
Compassion Pants, or, Don’t You Wish You Had a Pair

I am wearing my compassion pants with reinforced knees.
I practice knee-walking, to become closer to specific particulars,
like how the bear grubs through gorse and thicket when she isn’t
tonguing suet from its wire cage. I wear my compassion pants

slung low, my big girl underwear over the top peeking wrinkled
and generously, not sorry for stretch marks and billows. I roll
them up over ankles when the shit piles high. I pull them down
when the coast is clear. My compassion wears thin

at the crotch, and I’ve sewn a patch where my thighs rub.
My compassion pants say voom voom in velvety wide wale.
The President hates my pants. Bears eye my pants jealously,
raccoons come in the night to steal my pants from the laundry line.

I’ve stopped keeping suet in my pockets for this very reason.
I put my compassion on reasonably, one leg and at time.

Ronda Piszk Broatch is the author of Lake of Fallen Constellations, (MoonPath Press, 2015). Her poems have appeared in Blackbird, Prairie Schooner, Sycamore Review, Mid-American Review, Puerto del Sol, and other journals.

SUBMIT to What Rough Beast via our SUBMITTABLE site.

If you enjoyed today’s poem and you value What Rough Beast, consider making a donation to Indolent Books, a nonprofit poetry press.




What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 03 21 20

Emi Bergquist
While We Recover

In quarantine, the Forget-Me-Nots
blossom a grey-fade

as a quiet slow fills
the empty ravines of city streets.

Alone in a canyon, a voice will echo—
a voice will find its chorus:

Meanwhile in Italy, isolation has brought
people together, singing from their balconies.

Adaptability becomes
our survival —

the window
cracked open, beckoning

the early spring morning
breeze inside.

Emi Bergquist is a poet, performer, and mixed media artist originally from Idaho. Her work often explores the intersection of identity, sexuality, nature, love, and loss. She has lived in Brooklyn since 2015, is an active associate of the Poetry Society of New York, a regular cast member of The Poetry Brothel, and an editor of Milk Press Books.

SUBMIT to What Rough Beast via our SUBMITTABLE site.

If you enjoyed today’s poem and you value What Rough Beast, consider making a donation to Indolent Books, a nonprofit poetry press.




What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 03 20 20

Victoria Richard
Confessions of the Apocalypse

Since the stars
Have decided to shine
A little dimmer—

Since all peace
Has shriveled up
In earth’s belly—

Since the only
Glow I remember now
Is Australia on fire—

Since the only thing
I’ve felt in a week
Is trembling—

As I shake my uncle’s hand
As I push another allergy pill into my throat
As I Germ -X my table at the coffee shop

Is formality excused?
Do I get to say things
That no one thinks I should?

My brain is
Scrambling for serotonin
Like a mouse for crumbs

Can I say that
I still have dreams—
Vivid blue, sometimes gold—

My throat burns
From air whistling from
My lungs—

(Fuck you,
Amygdala,
Fuck you)

I’m a good girl
That is what
The dream says

I am always amazed
At how splendidly
My body functions

Smoother
Purer
Than my mind

I have decided
To allow myself
To be beshrewn

Honesty is usually
What people call
Evil—ugly—depraved—

I say it is
What makes a
Heart beat holy

Sometimes I lie
Awake remembering
Loving you—

I promise I don’t
Anymore—

Maybe something
Inside this rotten
Flower heart

Always will
Wonder if your
Breaths are tattered

Like mine.

Victoria Richard is a recent creative writing graduate of Jubilee Performing Arts Conservatory in McComb, Mississippi. She is currently studying English Literature at Millsaps College. Richard has received three Scholastic Awards for her work in fiction, poetry, journalism, and creative nonfiction. Her poetry has appeared in South 85 Journal.

SUBMIT to What Rough Beast via our SUBMITTABLE site.

If you enjoyed today’s poem and you value What Rough Beast, consider making a donation to Indolent Books, a nonprofit poetry press.




What Rough Beast | Poem for March 20, 2020

Francis Fernandes
Lull in the Time of Corona

Glenn Gould, the Bach specialist,
When not hunched over the keyboards
On his favourite stool, used to proffer
His hand to fellow musicians and journalists
Only at the last second to pull it away
And run it through his hair. We all know
That move from school. It was a joke,
A prank, just clowning around.
But for this genius it was as much
Fear of the other as impish horseplay.
And then there’s that famous anecdote
Where he gets a call from his colleague
Alfred Brendel, who is on a stopover
At Pearson International Airport:
During the conversation the German
Pianist, having caught a cold,
Can’t hold back a sneeze, and without
A moment’s delay Gould hangs up on him.
Those were certainly the good old days:
Innocent germs, the global oil crisis
And that awesome Summit Series of ’72.
But, hey, we are all hypochondriacs now.
We can’t help it. The lineups at the clinics
Are blocks long. There’s no more school.
No more hockey. No more concerts
(Although that would have suited Glenn,
Ensconced forever, as he was,
In the bubble of his recording studio).
So what are we to do?
We do the elbow bumps and footshakes.
Peace sign, namaste. Or we flout
Convention and shove our neighbour
To get at the merchandise. We buy
More guns. As for me, I’m not much
Of a musician, nor am I good
At improvising. And so I go running
Through the woods, picking up stray leaves
And stuffing them in the pockets
Of my jogging pants – seeing as toilet
Paper is so scarce. A precious commodity,
That. It’s become the rare-earth metal
Of Households. I heard that the real
Rare-earth metal in our cell phones
Most likely comes from a heavily guarded
Mine somewhere in Mongolia.
Which makes me wonder if the trucks
Filled with toiletry supplies will soon
Need an armed escort. My mother
Would tell us stories of the privations
They had to overcome in Nazi Germany,
The sacrifices they all made,
The little things that thrilled,
Like homemade jam and Mendelssohn.
We are at war, too, according to a leader.
“Nous sommes en guerre!” certainly
Makes it sound as though
We had a common enemy. Another leader,
Who is as good at ruffling his hair
As Gould, wants to do it his way,
Calling upon the people to forge
An alliance: “We must build immunity!”
While the Czar declares, “L’état c’est moi!”
And a clown President wonders
Where all his fans went to.
They’re closing factories for a while,
Some forever. White-collar employees
Are working on their laptops from home.
The sun is shining and the birch trees
Have begun to pollinate (which doesn’t
Make the jogging any easier for me).
And so being the cad that I am,
The incorrigible slacker, I get my friend,
Who’s my GP, to certify a paid sick leave.
Somehow that makes me feel unpatriotic.
As consolation, I decide to watch
The eight games (on DVD): that
Canada-Russia Super Series from ’72,
“The most dramatic hockey series
Ever played” (the same year, by the way,
That Gould’s record company released
The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book 2).
The whole point being: I’m tired
Of glancing at my cell phone
And keeping track of the number
Of infected people in my vicinity.
(The number is growing at an alarming
rate!) What I really want to do
Is relive a bit of the glory I felt
When I was only five. When I hadn’t
Yet grown to love Goldberg and Gould’s
Isolation. When the only numbers
I saw were the goals scored
And the only voice I heard cried out
“Scores! Henderson has scored…”

Francis Fernandes writes: I am a Canadian expat living in Germany. Until now I’ve been teaching English in a private language school, but what with the current global crisis I am now spending the days eating cake, sipping espresso, and going over some of my poems.

SUBMIT to What Rough Beast via our SUBMITTABLE site.

If you enjoyed today’s poem and you value What Rough Beast, consider making a donation to Indolent Books, a nonprofit poetry press.




What Rough Beast | Poem for March 19, 2020

Suzanne Edison
Coronavirus—Seattle 2020

Today I revisit Rembrandt’s painting The Anatomy Lesson
of Dr. Nicholaes Tulp: the cadaver’s arm splayed open

for us, and seven ruffle-cuffed and curious male faces, who peer
inside the strata of muscle and tendon or towards the bulging

anatomy book open at the deceased’s foot. The doctor is lecturing
on the visible, the common to all. In the 17th century, witnessing

anatomy lessons was a social activity; once a year dissections
welcome to the public. Our current lessons involve pandemic:

invisible viral menace whose droplets, passed in coughs or sneezes,
lodge inside our cells, igniting a cascade of cytokines, an inflammatory rush

of the body’s attempts to flood and flush foreign invaders.
Our lungs, hearts, possibly perforated or constricted.

To slow infection we have restricted congregation.

We are not standing shoulder to shoulder examining
a widespread, natural normal; we are empty

streets, shuttered restaurants, our kids banned from schools
and playdates, our elderly and homeless neighbors like tissues

crammed in boxes or left in crumpled isolation. All of us forced
to see faces on screens. Will surfing and clicking in virtual space quell

racing nerves, keep us knitted together? Even so, some of us
are singing from apartment balconies to friends and family,

some of us are calling loved ones on the phone. We need
the violinist on the corner serenading the quarantined.

As we stare into, and stave off, the grip of abyss, the unknown settles
on us, present as the shadow Rembrandt painted on his cadaver’s face.

Editor’s Note: What Rough Beast welcomes poems in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The usual editorial guidelines apply—we don’t generally like poems that dwell overmuch on the shortcomings of the Trump administration—It simply does not usually make for good poetry. Poems may allude to the administration’s catastrophic negligence in responding to this pandemic, but we’d rather read about your personal experience of the pandemic than a critique of the administration’s response.

Suzanne Edison is the author of the chapbook The Body Lives Its Undoing: Exploring Autoimmune Disease Through Poetry and Visual Art (Benaroya Research Institute, 2018). Her poems have appeared in Michigan Quarterly Review, The Naugatuck River Review, Scoundrel Time, Mom Egg Review, Persimmon Tree, JAMA, SWWIM, Intima, The Ekphrastic Review, and other journals. She lives in Seattle, and in fall 2019 was a writer in residence at Hedgebrook, a retreat for women writers on Whidbey Island, about thirty-five miles northwest of Seattle.

SUBMIT to What Rough Beast via our SUBMITTABLE site.

If you enjoyed today’s poem and you value What Rough Beast, consider making a donation to Indolent Books, a nonprofit poetry press.




What Rough Beast | Poem for March 18, 2020

Pamela Hobart Carter
Sown

after “Incipience,” by Adrienne Rich

To breathe, to sleep below a safe roof
while flame dances across forests
through nights when much is done
to stem all dreams

to parry the heat and fuel
that waits for ignition
molecules of ash
invisible

to numb the aching burn
of every limb in the land

Much will be sown.
Much will be sown. Compose yourself,
measure by measure, note by note,
study the flicker of feathers
in your backyard, count starlings
allowing visits of small yellow birds
before taking their tastes
of abundance presented
this garden
this feast

Editor’s Note: What Rough Beast welcomes poems in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The usual editorial guidelines apply—we don’t generally like poems that dwell overmuch on the shortcomings of the Trump administration—It simply does not usually make for good poetry. Poems may allude to the administration’s catastrophic negligence in responding to this pandemic, but we’d rather read about your personal experience of the pandemic than a critique of the administration’s response.

Pamela Hobart Carter is the author, with Arleen Williams, of twelve short books in easy English, published on the imprint they founded, No Talking Dogs. Carter’s poems have appeared in Barrow Street, Chaos, The Ekphrastic Review, Eunoia Review, Halcyon, The Pangolin Review, Red Eft Review, The Seattle Star, The Seattle Times, Tilde, and Washington Poetic Routes, among other journals and periodicals.

SUBMIT to What Rough Beast via our SUBMITTABLE site.

If you enjoyed today’s poem and you value What Rough Beast, consider making a donation to Indolent Books, a nonprofit poetry press.




What Rough Beast | Poem for March 17, 2020

Lynn McGee

Crush, 14

I talk to you with ear buds, gliding downhill
on my bike. A metal bridge sings and the Amtrak
passes beneath me, silver roofs flashing. We talk
past sailboats tethered in the Hudson, bare masts
lurching. We talk past the airline carrier, khaki
and steel museum looming at the pier, hull cinched
at the waterline. A family in white running shoes
breezes by on rented bikes. A helicopter hovers
and its blades send blasts of sound like giant sheets
snapping. Sometimes we pause, you and I, and silence
is the marrow in our conversation. I breathe it in,
content as that girl I knew in high school, the one
who would talk with her boyfriend, lights out,
bedroom door closed, boxy phone and springy cord
under the covers, and neither hung up as they
fell asleep in each other’s ears.

Crush, 15

My flight is delayed. Air masses glide across
the Midwest, grand as pachyderms, oblivious
to the havoc they cause. A jet descends,
its trajectory a slanted line toward the runway,
then the wheels hit tarmac, wings tipped
with ailerons rigid as a dancer’s hands pointing
up, her arms outstretched. How many times,
did my father try to teach me the physics of flight —
why there is lift, what holds up the tonnage
of an aircraft as it follows the earth’s curve.
His loneliness grounded him, and mine
grounds me—yet here I am listening
for the gate announcement, ready to rise.

Editor’s Note: What Rough Beast welcomes poems in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The usual editorial guidelines apply—we don’t generally like poems that dwell overmuch on the shortcomings of the Trump administration—It simply does not usually make for good poetry. Poems may allude to the administration’s catastrophic negligence in responding to this pandemic, but we’d rather read about your personal experience of the pandemic than a critique of the administration’s response.

Lynn McGee is the author of Tracks (Broadstone Books, 2019) and Sober Cooking (Spuyten Duyvil Press, 2016), as well as two  award-winning poetry chapbooks, Heirloom Bulldog (Bright Hill Press, 2015) and Bonanza (Slapering Hol Press, 1996). Here poems have appeared in the American Poetry Review, Southern Poetry Review, Ontario Review, Phoebe, Painted Bride Quarterly, Sun Magazine, and The New Guard, among other journals, as well as in the anthology Stonewall’s Legacy (Local Gems Press, 2019), edited by Rusty Rose and Marc Rosen. With José Pelauz, McGee wrote the children’s book Starting Over in Sunset Park (Tilbury House Publishers, 2020). She serves on the advisory board of the Hudson Valley Writers Center and co-curates the Lunar Walk Poetry Series with Gerry LaFemina and Madeleine Barnes. Online at lynnmcgee.com.

SUBMIT to What Rough Beast via our SUBMITTABLE site.

If you enjoyed today’s poem and you value What Rough Beast, consider making a donation to Indolent Books, a nonprofit poetry press.