What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 05 27 20 | Beth Dulin

Beth Dulin
My Dreams Are Full of Dead Men

For Joe O’Connor 1941 – 2020

And I feel like I’ve had my fair share of staring
into expensive wooden boxes at well-dressed bodies
with waxy faces, just rubber masks of those
I once knew and loved.
And you’re quarantined in a hospital bed
in a city that used to be my home
And there’s nothing I can do
but pray, set spells, and try
to reach you to say,
You can’t go now.
You have more to give us.
You survived Vietnam for God’s sake.
When you were asked at your poetry reading
if you kept a journal of the time you were there,
you said, No.
I had one thing on my mind
and that was to live.

—Submitted on 05/27/2020

Beth Dulin‘s poems have appeared in The American Journal of Poetry and in the anthology Bay to Ocean 2019: The Year’s Best Writing from the Eastern Shore Writers Association (Eastern Shore Writers Association, 2019), edited by Gregg Wilhelm. A graduate of Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts at The New School, Dulin lives on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. Online at bethdulin.com.

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What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 05 27 20 | Claressinka Anderson

Claressinka Anderson
On the Consumption of Rare Animals

When this is over,
when the bats lay down
their crowns,
when human mouths,
unlearning, uncover
themselves again—
take me somewhere
in your car. Anywhere.
Hold me. Breathe
on me.

—Submitted on 04/20/2020

Claressinka Anderson‘s work has appeared in Autre Magazine, Carla, The Los Angeles Press, Artillery Magazine and The Chiron Review, as well as in the anthology Choice Words: Writers on Abortion (Haymarket Books, 2020), edited by Annie Finch. Born and raised in London, Anderson is currently an MFA candidate in poetry at the low-residency Bennington Writing Seminars. She lives in Los Angeles.

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What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 05 27 20 | Trish Hopkinson

Trish Hopkinson
I want to order room service

I want to go jogging down the bicycle lane on the street near my house / gently glide down its slope away from Mount Timpanogos avoid the large fallen pods from locust trees & the sadness of a clump of decomposed bird’s feathers pressed flat by a pickup truck tire / the sadness of statistics of pandemics of children caged of women missing of men lying where they ought not to lie & then turn one-hundred-eighty degrees at the stop sign by the church back toward the mountain filling the sky blocking the horizon / where other sadness must exist between me & earth’s edge where it too turns / curves into ocean & dissolves into space / the sun wrapping it in a fiery blanket of soon-to-be ash & think if only the climb toward home was less steep until I reach my cul-de-sac, slow / to a walk to reach my doorstep & stretch off the intensity / taste the salt of my upper lip / feel the trickle from beneath my breast / step inside into the shower stall / rinse perspiration & pollen & pollution from my hair / finish just in time for that loud knock at the door

—Submitted on 04/05/2020

Trish Hopkinson is the author of several chapbooks, most recently Footnote (Lithic Press, 2017) and Almost Famous (Yavanika Press, 2019). Her poetry has appeared in Tinderbox, Glass Poetry Press, and The Penn Review, among other journals. Hopkinson lives in Provo, Utah. Online at SelfishPoet.com.

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What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 05 27 20 | Al Bright

Al Bright
Quarantine Haze

quarantine with my partner. well, that doesn’t sound too unnerving (that is, ‘til you calculate the size of our cramped quarters, forever within 6 feet of the other).

his breathing, do I hear the steady, deep and even breath of our meditations or is it shallow and rapid and do I have enough time to escape into Animal Crossing?

he shaves my head, my barbie past now on the floor, stuck between my toes. for the first time in my life I feel truly free, or maybe I’m only conforming to the non-binary, androgynous trends of today and so even more stuck, trapped in the honey jar that is society, than ever before?

he’s prepping every day, no, every minute – a survivalist at heart. he’s been awaiting these otherwise unforeseen days.

his charisma on another level as he calls local hospitals and healthcare centers to send donations. his preparedness now lending a helping hand to others. will i be the next first lady? awh shit no, i couldn’t handle it. he’ll have to go into politics alone.

i hear his chair squeaking, gently rocking back and forth as he lulls himself into a post-apocalyptic haze.

secretly i think he yearns for the end of days, to be my forever protector, but we both know i have no desire to ink my name into the microcosmic flesh of humanity.

let me disappear quietly. allow me to embrace the death at our doorstep. we must all learn to let.

—Submitted on 05/26/2020

Al Bright hails from the hills of West Virginia, and now lives in Los Angeles. Bright’s work has appeared in Right Hand Pointing, Elephant Journal, Wild Roof Journal, and other publications.

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What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 05 26 20 | Jennifer Roche

Jennifer Roche 
Shopping for My Mother

My mother put on a mask and rubber gloves,
drove herself to the Jewel, like a nurse thief,
to get eggs and half & half.
Mom, let me do that for you.
I’ll let you know when we get to that.
I think we are there.
I add a Heath bar.
Two bottles of white wine.
A blue-inked note
and a bouquet of yellow tulips,
picked up curbside from the florist,
bow-tied with twine:
Mom, I’m sorry I can’t come up to see you,
but I love you, and this will be over soon.
I towel down my missives
with a white disinfectant wipe
that wilts as I go,
and drive 45 minutes on a whispering highway
to leave the parcel on her front stoop.

As I depart, I picture her arthritic hands, freshly gloved,
lifting the brown bag gingerly from her stoop.
She will wipe it all down again in her kitchen.

Then, she’ll uncase her battery-operated corkscrew,
settle into her flower-upholstered chair,
and work her way through a backlog of Sunday Times.

We are going to be fine.
We are going to be.

—Submitted on 04/05/2020

Jennifer Roche is a the author of 20: Erasure Poems of Jules Verne’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (Alternating Current, 2020). Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Storm Cellar, Tule Review, Footnote, Oyez Review, Rain, and other journals. Roche lives in Chicago.

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What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 05 26 20 | Monica Raymond

Monica Raymond
Waiting for the Surge

This is what you need
to do to help—lie low
and let bright sun
burn through your window

burnishing you, no need
to jump up, blazing stars
take to this or that cause
with scimitars.

No, just as you were
in the first days
hearing quarrels you could neither
quench or appease,

your heart a field of grief.
Only now you know
as ambulance sirens
keen past your window

it was never yours to stop them.
And so, as packages of pandemic
tumble, hooded patients
chuff and cough, and heroic

nurses leave for work
in the early morning,
know yours is the path
of sitting, waiting, watching,

your heart a field
turned tawny by the sun.
“May all be well,
may what is done be done

in peace, may everyone
be safe” the field of gold
the sun makes possible.
Lay low and hold

the jagged earth, pebble, squabble,
in its fading glow.
It’s still morning. There’s a day, a world
left to come through. Lay low.

—Submitted on

Monica Raymond has received awards and fellowships from the Massachusetts Cultural Council in both poetry and playwriting, as well as from the Jerome Foundation and the MacDowell Colony. She held an 18-month residency at Central Square Theatre as one of the PlayPen Playwrights. Her play, The Owl Girl, won the PeaceWriting Award (granted jointly by the Peace and Justice Studies Association and the OMNI Center for Peace, Justice, and Ecology), as well as the Castillo Theater prize in political playwriting, and a Clauder Competition Gold Medal. An artist and teacher as well as a writer, Raymond lives in Cambridge, Mass.

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What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 05 26 20 | Elizabeth Kate Switaj

Elizabeth Kate Switaj
Our Assorted Quarantines

But the idea of smallness is relative; it depends on what is included and excluded in any calculation of size.
—Epeli Hau’ofa

I’m running thirty miles of quarantine with wandering pigs and semi
-feral dogs. Beach and coral and islets complete
the two-lane road’s atoll. You said that you were strangely proud
to know someone surrounded
by so much Pacific, and now your quarantine
is just your flat. Mine never exceeds an Olympic
pool’s length from oceanside or lagoon. The Olympics were meant
this year for the city where we met.
You’re teaching online. I’m preparing my college in case confirmed
cases hit the island. Flights have gone from eight per week to two
in April. May is unconfirmed.

But mostly we’re waiting to know
who that we know will die.
The closest I have ever come to weightlessness
is diving, and I can still descend
among the unicorn fish, eels, rays, and reef sharks of assorted tips.

—Submitted on 04/05/2020

Elizabeth Kate Switaj is the poetry collection Magdalene & the Mermaids (Paper Kite Press, 2009) and the critical monograph James Joyce’s Teaching Life and Methods: Language and Pedagogy in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, Ulysses, and Finnegans Wake (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016). Recent poems have appeared in Voice & Verse Poetry Magazine, Rougarou, and The Inflectionist Review. She works at the College of the Marshall Islands.

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What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 05 26 20 | Jean Prokott

Jean Prokott
Empathy Is a Pre-Existing Condition

we can neither insure or assure you & others,
this is the system by design. a doctor died

by suicide. we say keep your composure. we say
it’s not that bad. your empathy is a cold egg,

hold it in your hands, place it in warm water,
crack it open, get rid of it, and start over. send

yourself to rehab for kindness and hope insurance
covers it. the cure is close the door and turn off

the light so no one knows you’re home. post your
empathy online #nofilter. learn to respond:

Am I My Brother’s Keeper? this is not sustainable.
one day, there will be a word for this, a national

diagnosis. some say it’s over-reactive. others say it’s
normal. we say it’s empathy, and only some of us had it.

—Submitted on 05/19/2020

Jean Prokott‘s poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Arts & Letters, Anomaly, RHINO, and Red Wheelbarrow, among other journals.  She lives in Rochester, Minn. Online at jeanprokott.com.

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What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 05 25 20 | Francine Rubin

Francine Rubin
Pandemic Insomnia

I don’t want to miss anything.
Tiny scrap of news.
Slightest virus symptom.
Family on video chat, not yet embraceable.
Husband asleep.
Baby in the next room
making snow angels in his sleep,
waking with new sounds in his mouth,
new gestures with his perfect infant body.
My beautiful town, which I’ll stroll
in the cool rainless morning,
socially distant neighbors waving
flanked by teddy bears in windows.
The occasional child zooming
too closely on a bicycle, forgetting
about distance.
How good we have it.
How much we have to lose.

—Submitted on 04/04/2020

Francine Rubin is the author of If You’re Talking to Me: Commuter Poems (dancing girl press, 2019), City Songs (Blue Lyra Press, 2016), and Geometries (Finishing Line Press, 2012). Her poems have appeared in Faultline, Red Flag Poetry, The Stillwater Review, and Tule Review, among other journals. She is online at francinerubin.tumblr.com.

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What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 05 25 20 | Saranya Subramanian

Saranya Subramanian
These Days

These days Atul simply stares out the window
at the falling flowers.

The grumpy trees shudder off Gulmohars
every morning when the sun arrives sooner than expected.

Gulmohars fall to the ground
to inform the ants that summer has arrived.

On other, older days, Atul would be Poseidon
and his broom would be a Trident, and the
sheets of dust layered over concrete roads
would be waves under his command. His
Trident would pull dusty sheets back and
forth—waves running and retreating, crashing
against each other and dissolving—dragging
Gulmohars with them along their way.

Then, Atul would tie up green bags of
broken bottles and torn skullcaps, melting
plastic combs and fraying phone chargers, and
knit them shut with all the fallen Gulmohars.

All, but one.

Just one Gulmohar, the yellowest of the lot,
Atul would tuck inside his left breast
pocket, hiding it behind the saffron
logo stitched upon khaki cloth.

Atul would give that to Susheela later.

But these days, Atul simply stares out
the window at the falling flowers. He watches
them dance off branches and pirouette
to the ground. He watches them fall and get
stuck to the sweat that poured out of his body
for twenty years and covered the road
like cling-wrap. In the years when monsoon
refused to arrive, Atul’s sweat was mixed
with concrete, smoothening the mould
and stretching the road forward. These days,
he watches the flowers graze softly over
the cat’s tail, now too heavy for her body. The
Gulmohars lay themselves in sacrifice
before Tommy and Sheru, his lunch buddies
who feel betrayed by his absence. Atul watches
the flowers shower over police vans, whose
shrill sirens celebrate through silenced
roads after finally having caught the
UrbanNaxalTerroristAntiNationals. He watches
the flowers fall over hospitals and doctors,
gutters and their cleaners, in hope that yellow
petals can stretch wide enough to become face-
covering masks, or body-covering suits;

only to end up covering the overworked bodies
that collapse to the ground.

These days, Atul watches the Gulmohars
shroud over bodies, decorating broken limbs
splayed on kachha roads and forgiving the
broken promises that would have been fulfilled

if only they’d walked 100 km more
if only they had left sooner
if only they remained in their foreign villages tucked inside foreign towns and kept their foreign words imprisoned inside their foreign bodies.

Now, Atul watches the Gulmohars rain down
every morning, clogging up roads and painting
over grey with bright yellow. He then shuts
the window and retreats inside his home. He
smiles at Susheela, now wearing shrivelled-up,
crispy brown Gulmohars in her hair, holding on
to the little scent they still have to give.

Atul and Susheela wait together for better
days, when they too will collapse to the
ground, when they will dissolve into brown
and pink pulpy matter—compost—with
the earth, so Gulmohars can fall over them
and whole trees can spring up. Branches can
then grow freely, manically criss-cross over
rusted fences and wrap themselves around
dilapidating buildings, push themselves
inside forgotten parked cars and poke right
through flags, tiptoe across ceasefires and
shoot up wildly to stare at the moon.

But better days seem far away.

These days Atul simply stares out the window
at the falling flowers.

There is little else for him to do.

—Submitted on 05/20/2020

Saranya Subramanian is a 22 year old writer and theatre practitioner in Mumbai. Currently working at Radio Mirchi, she entering the MFA program in creative writing at the University of San Francisco in the fall. She spends her time reading Mahesh Dattani’s plays and watching Madhubala’s movies.

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