What Rough Beast | Poem for November 22, 2018

Sarah Caulfield
Break My Bones

I want to be able to say the word dyke without choking around it;
Without falling backwards into a smaller version of myself,
A decade old, who only knew the word crunched like an apple core,
Like something gone rotten. That it was something to do with what women
Did with their mouths, and that was what made them
Something unclean.

The second time I let a boy kiss me, I remember waiting to feel something
Other than fear. Nothing more than a cellophane girl: put your eye right to me,
And I disappear. It’s magic!
Later, I cleaned him out of me, the slug of toothpaste winking up at me
From the sink, glistening until the taste was gone.

I long to arrive at a point beyond shame, but the road uphill is made unstable:
I am tearing out my own spine and calling it a Jacob’s ladder, licking over the scars of
Old wounds so often they seem to open. They make themselves known with the sting,
Soft newly-wombed mouths under my tongue, given life, growing,
Crying of holy palmer’s kiss, and Communion wine, and the waiting reckonings
I have yet to make, the makers I have yet to meet, the growing sense I will have to answer
To my elders. Forgive me, I will say. Forgive me. I am still plucking out the stitches.



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 the UK, Poland and Germany, and currently lives in Japan.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for November 21, 2018

Julene Tripp Weaver
Cleaning Up One Problem Makes Another

—Song of Witches (William Shakespeare, MacBeth)
—Japan’s Fukushima Cleanup Minister says refugees from nuclear reactor are on their own (Headline)

Nuclear plants worldwide mess with our
air, our water, our planet, toxic leakage
with its long half-life beyond our lifespan.

Double, double toil and trouble

Who thinks they are so very smart to dump
tritium contaminated water into the ocean,
this cleanup that will never reach its end.

Fire burn and caldron bubble

Wounded by this alchemy towards entropy
(these are not plush toys to put away) this is a
problem that invades our cells, our membranes.

Filet of a fenny snake

Spoiled sacred geometry from such smarts.
Chernobyl tower capped with Zoolite, while
Fukushima contaminates our ocean, our fish.

In the caldron boil and bake

Tritium to join the plastics, the microfibers,
the sonic blasts (our navy’s rave). Who are we
to dare destroy such sanctity and safety.

Eye of newt and roe of frog

Our industrial surge labeled progress. How
will we recover with half-hearted cleanup?
You sent robots into the waste to report—

Wool of bat and tongue of dog

like the canaries in the coal mine—the robots
died, destroyed, like our eventual fate.

Like a hell-broth boil and bubble



Julene Tripp Weaver is a psychotherapist and writer in Seattle, WA. She has a chapbook and two full size collections. Her latest, truth be bold—Serenading Life & Death in the Age of AIDS, published by Finishing Line Press, was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Awards and won the Bisexual Book Award and four Human Relations Indie Book Awards. Her work is online at The Seattle Review of Books, HIV Here & Now, Voices in the Wind, Antinarrative Journal, Anti-Heroin Chic, MadSwirl, and Writing in a Woman’s Voice, you can find more of her writing at www.julenetrippweaver.com.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for November 20, 2018

David James
THE FINAL SAY ON THE MATTER

If no one has the answer,
why do you keep asking the question?
Just go along on your merry way
and stop here if you want, stop there
if you want. Or you can barrel ahead

like it’s no one’s business, eat something, stay
in that, watch those, buy these.
Life is a history of choices made
and not made. At the time, you weigh
the pros and cons, pray a little, break the bread

of chance and let the spade
fall where it may. There’s no right
or wrong, just good or worse. If you make it
to the end and you’re not afraid,
count your lucky stars. May this blessing wrap around
those you love like a sacred and invisible thread.



David James’ third book, MY TORN DANCE CARD by FCNI Press, was a finalist in the 2016 Next Generation Indie book award and the 2017 Book Excellence Awards. His second full-length book, SHE DANCES LIKE MUSSOLINI, won the 2010 Next Generation Indie book award for poetry. In addition to GOING DOWN, FRIEND from Finishing Line in 2017, he has published five other chapbooks; more than thirty of his one-act plays have been produced from New York City to California. He teaches writing in Michigan.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for November 19, 2018

Emily Vieweg
Vision
after The Laramie Project, by Moises Kaufman and Tectonic Theatre Project as performed by the Fargo/Moorhead Community Theatre, October 2018

Over the years in this theatre, seat B-H-12 has earned its lumps, its creaks and creases,
and as I scan the program, I read of the plot and the actors. I see
a single set with movable chairs, and, I know from experience,
waiting backstage, a hundred familiar characters breathing deeply and,
ready or not, the show will go on.

I will notice the blinking house lights, calling “places” for the audience.
House lights will fade to half, followed by a sound cue, an announcement, and blackness.

Lights Up, Go.

I realize that I have been gifted an extra set of eyeglasses.
Not glasses that help me read or see the road as I drive in rain, but
glasses that shield my sight. I do not mourn this lack of sight, per se,
it keeps me sheltered, it keeps me innocent, it keeps me from
knowing the world is against me. Perhaps I have inherited this naiveté
from my father, who raised me to find the good first, then see
the hard as pain, as struggle, because even the Gorilla in the neighborhood
had clown-like shoes. I could smile at that thought.

My breath catches as I witness The Fence. The Buck Fence.
The Buck Fence is set upstage left. The Fence could be used as a
metaphor for distance – from truth, maybe? In this case, though, The Fence is
not hyperbole or metaphor or simile. The Fence is Death.
Twenty years ago, The Fence held a young man. Twenty-one. Beaten. Left For Dead.
Murdered. Because he lived his true self. I wonder if this true self was too
foreign to others, not because they were born that way, but because, as Hammerstein
famously penned, “You’ve got to be carefully taught…”

As the curtain falls, my head drops forward.
My fingers pick the rose-colored glasses off the bridge of my nose.
We could have been so healthy – instead, we are choosing
Fear, Migraines, Anger, and Ulcers. Any style of hurt
to remind us: We are still alive!!

Why must we not see the fly rehydrating from the dew of the banana leaf? or
the notebook’s overwritten pages, complete with folded corners? or
post-it-note-ridden textbooks?
I mean, Sarah ate all her peas tonight! The car started!
My pillows have cases. Water is drip-drip-drippling into the cat dish, and
you can still smell grandma on the afghan, eighteen years later.

Maybe we see what we want to see?
There are pluses and minuses to this strategy.

By the way, what tint is embedded in the lenses you wear?
Do you see the leaves, or the weeds? Petals? Thorns?
How low do you wear your ball cap?

A darkened molded plastic protects your single set of eyes.
Open them.
Blink once, or twice,
give your sight time to adjust.

What will you see today? Shrubs? or Aphids?
Pinto? or Manure?
Infant? or Sin?

I grew up seeing shrubs and all things green.
Perhaps this innocence is choosing a paler color for today’s tinted trifocals.

~~~
When I walk outside with my daughter, I see
the doting grandparents eager to converse with
her stuffed puppy dog and help her giggle
at fart noises.

When I walk outside with my son, eight inches
taller than I, visually 24, socially 16,
he is now an adult and I know
his muted, solitary stroll across the mall
may evoke alarm.

Perhaps we see what we want –
or do we see that which makes our breath stop?
How strong is that animal part of our brain?

My chiropractor adjusts the stress from my neck and shoulders,
bones realign, air pockets pop, crunch, and I grunt from the good pain – the relief.
I am so heavy… fresh out of the ocean, full of sand and salt.

I pry the rose-colored glasses from the bridge of my nose,
place them in my pocket this time.

Some evils share a red deeper than roses
these molecules, unstrained, pass through.

I remember my first set of rose-colored glasses.
I was 10.
All of us: my sister, myself, mom, and dad, drove to dad’s office
40 minutes away. We met a portly fellow outside the building –
he wore a tattered white t-shirt, oversized jeans, and sneakers;
a resident of the state hospital near downtown St. Louis.
I squeezed daddy’s hand.
“It’s okay, Muffy,” he’d say, “These folks aren’t dangerous, they’re just sick.”
“Will I get a fever?” asked my sister.
“No, Buddy. Their illness is in the brain. They are not contagious.”

Our lenses are not all-filtering, fully-sifting, opaque.
They help us notice, at times, how different is not always dangerous.
Just, when we hide behind those glasses –
when we remove them from our coat pockets and don them on a cloudy day –
when they become part of our daily costume –
moment by moment, inch by inch, molecule by molecule,
our lenses become less transparent. They filter deeper shades.
Until all we see is
black or white,
left or right,
all or nothing.

~~~

As I reflect and refract from the representation of feeling and fact,
the curtain falls.
my head collapses into my hands,
my palms cover a muted scream and I see
twenty years after Laramie, after Matt…
not much has changed.

except, now our stage whispers carry further,
carry longer, hold more clout and attention,
and our staged personas will morph into full characters
with faces and names and facts and fury

for this reason
we stand
sighted
and sing.



Emily Vieweg is a poet originally from St. Louis, Missouri. Her work has been published in Soundings Review, Art Young’s Good Morning, Proximity Magazine, Spillwords.com and more. She lives in Fargo, North Dakota where she is a mother of two, cat wrangler and office assistant.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for November 18, 2018

Mike Nichols
Oliver Twist Revisited

In ‘merica we wade through
ash and waste to stand and beg
outside their gates, our eyes and
bellies empty, gone mad with
grief for our departed progeny
too numerous to feed.

Perhaps now sir, only if you’re full,
might you spare a morsel?



Mike L. Nichols is a graduate of Idaho State University and a recipient of the Ford Swetnam Poetry Prize. He lives and writes in Eastern Idaho. Look for his poetry in Rogue Agent, Scryptic Magazine, Ink&Nebula, Plainsongs Magazine, and elsewhere. Find more at mikenicholsauthor.com

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What Rough Beast | Poem for November 17, 2018

Angela Corbet
En Masse

It is the eve of the mid-term election.
What to do but write and pick
my cuticles raw, oozing
to the quick. Directives
and misdirection burn,
a searing splatter
over and over
until scorched, then numb.
There is a draining of desire.
I sit on a cold folding
chair in a row of private
spotlighted despair
and listless hours of today,
yesterday. Impotent reason,
pocked and pierced with birdshot,
flutters a moment before it plummets.

Then like a murmuration of starlings
roiling and banking, blackening,
on a twinkle I rise,
divine my neighbor’s temper,
subtle twitch and blink.
Chanting up the lanes,
charging the land, the water,
the air: you and you and you and me.
I resonate like song.
I can call and respond.



Angela Corbet‘s poems have appeared in Sliver of Stone, Wordrunner, and Red River Review. She is a retired English Language Arts middle school teacher, having worked in school districts in eastern Massachusetts.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for November 16, 2018

Susanna Donato
Late Autumn, Family

For the mourners

My redneck uncle
(his term, not mine, though I confess
I have adopted it)

—the one who mounted
a Trump sign the size of a tractor
in his front yard—

so I heard
though I did not see the sign
could not bear to visit for a final goodbye—

has fallen silent
on Facebook after years of hilarity
and by hilarity

I mean photos of snarling
Hillary, and ape memes
of Michelle, of Barack.

Which change of heart
precipitates this silence?
The disasters and the war

threats or memory
of my paratrooper grandfather
or preoccupations?

He has a new puppy
so I hear, I haven’t seen him
since the perfect day

the rain held off,
he said I love you sweetie
at the rocky spot

where men with ropes
gave over to faith’s final gulp
basket ash concrete

confetti and lavender
mixed with soil and the not-tears of men
for she who made us

one rose on the tray
when he brought her breakfast
each morning, so I hear



Susanna Donato is a Denver-based writer whose poems have appeared in Entropy and Columbia, and essays have appeared in Proximity, Okey-Panky, Blue Earth Review, and elsewhere. Learn more at www.susannadonato.com or on Twitter @susannadonato.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for November 15, 2018

Jonathan Endurance
How Do You Ask Your Body For A Little Vacation

when your body was forced to accept the hurricane
hidden in a man’s voice
you named it a jellyfish learning the waves of the sea

& now your body knows no peace:
it is a jellyfish trapped in a tank of salty water
& a bird carrying the weight of the sky on its wings

your body does not belong to you
it left the day you were forced to swallow a speech of bullet
that formed phlegm of tragedy in your throat
& with every attempt to ask your body for a little vacation
you crumbled into the fist of a hurricane

you wonder how the hell everything tastes
like rusty metal at the tip of your tongue

in the dream
your body wakes into a path of darkness
greeted by the photographs of your dead ones
with their faces drawn into scars

the ruins have worn your body too often
into an old museum

you wonder where to go from here
when the city is a gunfire
living in a man’s voice?



Jonathan has had his work on several journals and anthology which include (but not limited to) Kalahara Review, Coldnoon, Electronic Pamphlet, Brittle Paper, “Spring,The Season of Love”… He is a piece of sweet dark chocolate. He loves football and studies in a still room.
You can say hello on Facebook: www.facebook.com/jonathan.young50
or simply Jonathan Endurance.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for November 14, 2018

Margo Davis
Banana Phobia

We tried everything
with the new produce clerk,
who cowered in gloves
and apron. I peeled,
quartered, ate with granola.
When I made him pick up
a black ‘n’ bruised one,
he dropped it like a
joy buzzer, bruising its last
bright spot the size of a
code sticker. I tried to pinpoint
what frightened this grown man
transferring in from cold
cuts. Could it be the long
thick skins protecting its
fruit? The stem? Shape?
How some are green and
hard? Being plucked
before hitting one’s prime?
He mouthed inequity
— or was that iniquity?–
then retched on a bunch
poised for banana bread.
I snuck up behind him with
a wee cluster from Hawai’i,
four pocket-sized purple
bananas sweet as apples.
I swear, he said, someday
you too must face what will
undo you
. Then he swung
his mallet as if in a horror flick,
pulverizing the wee ones.



Margo‘s more recent poems have appeared in The Fourth River, Ekphrastic Review, Misfit, and Light, and the Houston Chronicle (Fall). Recent anthology publications include Enchantment of the Ordinary (December), Of Burgers and Ballrooms, Untameable City, numerous Texas Poetry Calendars, and Echoes of the Cordillera. A Pushcart nominee awash in Republican mindsets, Margo thrives on closely observing film, photos, and natural settings. She’s known for eavesdropping.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for November 13, 2018

Devon Balwit
Know

The direction of Paradise isn’t clear.
Pilgrims need savvy. The border patrol agent
offering assistance might duct tape you to a bed.
State security men in neat uniforms might drag you
off campus and beat you until you fit in a trunk.
You might enter your embassy only to emerge
in pieces. That road through the green wood
might flare a maelstrom of cinders. Your roof
might catch and burn. You might walk your shoes
to ruin only to be turned back at the border
or worse. In your head, the 91st psalm: I will not fear
the terror of night, nor the pestilence that stalks
in the darkness
. The elderly professor repeats it
on the subway platform after being knocked down
by a commuter. Or, spared the arrow that flies by day
and the Slough of Despond, even the alluring may entrap,
a Vanity Fair of gewgaws, each with its secret chip
listening in. Pilgrim, you also listen in. You’ll hear
a small heartbeat—hope—steady as a sonogram,
even though as yet, you can feel no movement.
Know that, within you, Paradise gestates.

Devon Balwit is the author of A Brief Way to Identify a Body (Ursus Americanus Press, 2018). Her poems have appeared in Rattle, Poets Reading the News, The NewVerse News, The Ekphrastic Review, Peacock Journal, and more. For more of her poetry, reviews, collections, and chapbooks, visit her website, devonbalwitpoet.

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