What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 04 12 20 | Sohrab Mosahebi

Sohrab Mosahebi
On the Third Day of Announcing COVID-19 Epidemic in Iran

We come to being by a droplet
We slide on the musical tenderness of existence
We go to nothingness by a particle

We are dependent on soap and water
Our vitality dependent on the presence of latex
Our morbidity dependent on the width of nanometer!
We turn to smoke, not as a message, but as a passage
We turn to smoke while smoking kills!
We’re doomed to rely on a little ascorbic acid

We are the naked body of David trapped in the stone
Nipples of Leda longing for the swan,
Venus’s arms with no hands
We are the artless outbreak of unalive beings holding an artful outplay!
The tragicomic of disinfection and alcohol
The epic of pandemic

And you are gone
Tumours escorting you
You can’t see here
Particles have learnt the art of devastating
But we still haven’t learnt the art of loving
White pus become white swan in Leda’s vulva
While we still cannot become divinity with our nobility
With a sight to the music of our existence we turn to smoke
But we still haven’t learnt inexistence

—Submitted on 03/22/2020

Sohrab Mosahebi is an English literature student in Iran. His poems in Persian have appeared in print and online in journals in Iran. His research focuses on English Romanticism.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for April 11, 2020

Chad Parenteau
Resistance Tankas, Reel 14

Boris Johnson Jesus Tanka

Outside the room of
Boris Johnson Jesus, guards
throw dice on the floor.
Other staff gather to see
who will get to pierce his side.

Linda Tripp Jesus Tanka

Linda Tripp Jesus
took no final confessions
until very end,
her last breath inquisition,
each tear a slipped confession.

Bernie Sanders Jesus Tanka, Take Two

A little more time,
says Bernie Sanders Jesus
while holding the cross.
with one hand. Not ready yet!
I’ll hold this up, hold the nail…

—Submitted on 04/09/2020

Chad Parenteau is the author of Patron Emeritus (FootHills Publishing, 2013). His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Tell-Tale InklingsQueen Mob’s Tea HouseThe Skinny Poetry JournalIbbetson Street, Molecule, and Résonance. He serves as associate editor of Oddball Magazine and hosts the venerable Stone Soup Poetry series in Boston. His second full-length collection, The Collapsed Bookshelf, is forthcoming.

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What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 04 11 20 | Matthew Innes

Matthew Innes
The thing they don’t tell you

is that grace is also an infection. It
will fill your

blood with flowers. It will

call you neighbour and cost you nothing.
The thing they

won’t say out loud is that

something drowned the garden in care,
and now the earth

has given us her sick.

I don’t know how long this particular sun
will cast

this particular shade upon us, but

even the greenest grass will tell you that a
garden can

still grow in the shade.

Matthew Innes, of Auckland, New Zealand, has worked in mental health advocacy services since 2014. He posts words and music at greycadejo.wordpress.com.

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What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 04 11 20 | Eliza Blazely

Eliza Blazely
An Invisible Beast

An invisible beast prowls, hungrily,
Over the land, searching for victims,
It curls up in the lungs of the fragile,
And cruelly consumes them from the inside.

The streets fill with unrelenting panic,
The shelves of supermarkets are emptied,
School and office buildings turn silent,
As the whole world whips into a frenzy.

Calm yourself; stay at home, safe and cosy,
Call your family and study their breathing,
Be loving, share your hoard, and together,
We can create a shield against its claws.

One day, this grim crisis will be over,
The hopeful sun rises again and again,
And always will, so please hold on tightly,
Soon we will wake to find the monster dead.

Eliza Blazely is an Australian high school student. She has been passionate about writing since a very young age and plans to pursue a career as a writer.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for April 10, 2020

Lynn McGee
Crush, 16

Now I know your truck has the mild scent
of leather. Your cuffs are embroidered with initials,
and your middle initial is L, lazy as rope floating
on the surface of water, unlooping. When I arrive,
there are olives and bottles of wine on the onyx
counter. You give me the larger room, my bed
a lavish white raft. There’s an ice pack
in the freezer for my knee, and a package of frozen
peas. The coffeemaker’s gurgling doesn’t wake you.
The Vegas sun is more in charge than the sun
in New York City. Grackles colonize every tree
in the path of their invasion, and make muscular
strides across the lawn. Your glass of water
from last night magnifies the room key
behind it. The virtual you and live you align,
and my eyes adjust to morning light.

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.

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What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 04 10 20 | Joanna Collins

Joanna Collins
Two Poems

June

We held the ice between our teeth
Hoping it would melt
As the acid rain blew by

I longed to drag my knuckles across your laugh lines
No air between us and the photo of us
Happy and joking in 2019

But all we had now was a sketch of our hands
Clasped together in prayer
Holding on for dear life

We hid our vision boards behind paintings of the Great War
Crammed velvet gloves into vacuum sealed bags under our beds
Pausing our dreams for a softer time

We held the ice between our teeth
With clenched jaws and pursed lips
Saving all the best lines for June

Dancing on the Head of a Pin

In the time of the plague
We kissed with our words
Sanitizing our lips with poems about youth
We let every pen run out of ink
Scratching at the page
Declarations we could finally say
At the end of the world

As the virus spread, we learned the art of the tease
Tips of gloved fingers
Showing the eyes where to look
Tracing what could be
Our forgotten fantasies, pressed against the glass

When the globe began to sweat
We danced on her edge like she’s flat after all
Our fear of dying
A broken strand of pearls, slipping off the side

I woke up to find
You’d planted flowers on my sill
Like you’re certain of tomorrow
I wonder why
Why
Why bother when they might not last through the spring
For love, you say
Even if we have just one moment more

Joanna Collins holds a JD from Vanderbilt University Law School, and a BA in psychology and American studies from the University of Notre Dame. She is an attorney at the Tennessee Department of Education and a frequent denizen of Poetry in the Brew (at Portland Brew East) and other Nashville open mics.

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What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 04 10 20 | Juliette Rossant

Juliette Rossant
Two Poems

Change the Weather

The dampness of the world crawls in,
Miserable beast,
Hard underbelly, soft skull, brittle skin and teeth and hair.
Easy to kill such a thing?
Easier to crawl out from where it came and leave
The destruction behind.

Absolute as wind is unforgiving,
What to wish for that is impossible now
That all things are possible?
A change in weather by vote?
A skill in moving something that cannot be tied up in a bag
Or boxed or thrown by the swift kick of a horse uphill.
Where could you find such strength nowadays,
When strength is squandered on old men and wicked dreams?

About the hill that is a stand-in for history,
And the horse that guards the future,
And the weather that stoops and bridles the effort to change
What can be,
Are a pen, paper and discarded glasses,
And the rain that washes anything I write away.
Bring me inside, shelter my wish,
while the last raindrops fall away.

Pandemic

What can a poet say to a pandemic?
Stern-faced, arm raised, and shouting
The poet aims a pen.
This thick knot of paper thrown hard at the wall, bounces off the table, ends up on the floor
Covered in pandemic.
Trawling through the dictionary
The poet searches for synonyms
Of fear, of sickness, of death.
Gazing out the window,
Coughing and wiping hands like
The clouds spreading rain on rock and treetops in a far-off mountain chain,
Approaching the city,
The rain comes down as a fever rises.
Unable to move fingers and hands,
Unable to shift body or mind,
The poet dwells on lost lines,
Counting how many written and how many forgotten.

Juliette Rossant is the author of Super Chef: The Making of the Great Modern Restaurant Empires (Simon & Schuster, 2004). Her poems have appeared in Extensions and the Stonefence Review.

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What Rough Beast | Poem for April 9, 2020

Ronnie Sirmans
Three Poems

Kind of Dying for a Cause

My friends left work early
so they could head to the park
to lie down dead. Lots of others
surrounded them, prone on mats,
blankets, towels, or even nothing
atop the ground, imitating slainness.
A protest of unencumbered silence
to speak for victims, against violence.

Sanguine, at my numbing desk,
I surf the web and today’s headlines
include new research on dragonflies.
The female of a certain species
has been observed to fake her death
to avoid males’ unwanted advances.
This clever creature drops to the ground
as her iridescent-winged would-be suitor
laments how beauty can die so suddenly.

I move on the web to images of the die-in,
and I look closely for my fallen friends.
Some people have placards or flimsy
cardboard atop their bodies, slick slogans
covering their faces from the sunshine.
Others’ eyes are closed as journalists
step delicately among the mass nongrave.
Some of the bodies are dressed in black,
as if even the dead can mourn, knowing
that tonight, tomorrow, and after that
will be unimagined reckonings, offering
no choice, no fireless phoenix rising up
from a pretend personal hell on the ground.

Illumination

In the not-quite-dark of a full moon and quietude
of a suburban subdivision, walking two small dogs
who seem amazed by my return home each night,
I review the day’s news and social interactions
and wonder again what is wrong with the world.
So then I think on how when I was growing up,
there were a dozen people who were walking
this world who also had set foot on the moon.
Unbending time has cut that number by two-thirds,
and I think that offers a clue to what’s happened
in this shrinking world with diminished people.

Because we’ve been lulled from lunar progress,
in the years ahead there will come a time
when no such astronauts will be among
the billions of us trapped by this gravity.
But for now I contemplate men who walked
238,900 miles from where I’m patiently
standing on the side of a twilighted street,
the little black Chihuahua mix pulling north
as the little white rat terrier mix pulls south,
my arms and thoughts like a compass needle.

I also must wonder why we stopped sharing
this miraculous travel before the inevitable:
a woman stepping foot 238,900 miles away,
a scientist or a pilot of color proclaiming
one small step for somebody and one giant
leap for humankind not to falter in our dreams.
The two dogs, yanking leashes like yin and yang,
aren’t troubled to discuss history or diversity;
they wish to explore distant lawns. I look up,
wishing to see our lunar modules left in that dust.
From here you’d think it was incandescent up there.
Do things there rust or is that an earthbound curse?
Even in darkness, the full moon can cast shadows.

America’s Top 10

10.
I am not taking the knee because it is too painful. Doesn’t matter which, my knee protests with popping noises like fizzled fireworks if I try to get into a position like a faltering faith of uncertain genuflection.

9.
My first girlfriend said I would get lost if I went down there because her stuff was like venturing into the ether. My last boyfriend didn’t want kids but wanted to get married, and I took too long to venture an opinion on either.

8.
Black is not the opposite of white; a cliché is not the opposite of truth. A poem is not a baton; a Taser is not a kite dangling a key waiting to be struck by lightning. Binary is not the opposite of them.

7.
Tattoos have crawled from older generations’ arms and backs and legs and chests to the new generation’s necks and faces. Tattoos don’t signal races.

6.
Love was tattooed atop the fingers on one hand of a one-night stand, hate on the other. I ignored him the next time I saw him. I thought it was a minor offense.

5.
You can’t spell America without i. For indigo or immigrant, you need two i’s. Insensitive or indicative gets i, i, i, like three votes. But our ayes and eyes don’t need I.

4.
You can’t spell United States without U. A cliché is not the opposite of truth. Truth also needs u.

3.
Countdowns don’t happen only once. We might count on too much. Ancient Romans counted down the top hits from X to I.

2.
Love and hate have neither u nor i. Tattoos have to be burned off if you change your mind on ink, and we learn people are not as malleable as we may think. Every tattoo is personal, and the scar left when it’s gone is personal. Keloids are personal. Homonyms are personal. Letters are personal. Poetry is personal.

1.
I

Ronnie Sirmans‘ poems have appeared in Tar River Poetry, The American Journal of Poetry, Sojourners, Jewish Currents, America, As It Ought to Be Magazine, Deep South Magazine, and elsewhere. An award-winning headline writer, Sirmans lives in metro Atlanta.

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What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 04 09 20 | Benjamin Welton

Benjamin Welton
Ten Poems

Sniper on the 10th Floor

Every time I’m on the tenth floor,
counting the freezers storing life,
I turn and look out the window.

I watch other lives being lived,
but most of all I look for you—
the hunter who hates me.

I know I’m in your crosshairs;
they burn my back when I turn.
But you never shoot.

Why?

Another Dream

Night—
I walk alone down the same streets
thinking the same thoughts
as every night before.

But on this night a scent
cuts through the clouds;
it’s the smell of a million rose petals.

It is feminine, it is beautiful.
It beckons to me with a hand fair and mild.
I eat the air like manna.

But then, as suddenly as the scent appears,
it is gone.
Reminding me that it is for someone else.

Cathedral in the Mist

February exhales fog—
it covers every corner
with a damp film.
It cannot be scrapped off by mortal fingers.
But the claws of God pierce and project north.
Stone spires signaling the end of the fog’s empire.
And behind the final curtain of mist,
against the soundtrack of rain,
are the stain glassed windows
dyed a mournful yellow.

Mukden

Hate cuts through the trees,
limb by limb.
The grass and bamboo are replaced by steel
foreign.
Cold bricks and blocks of stone
rest against the mountain.
Where once was wind divine
is now the plague bacillus
bred in the iron temple.

Priest-gods in white robes are masked.
They come with scalpel fingers;
they want to touch your inferior body.
Do you let them?
If they offer you cold,
do you agree?

Maybe the horror of it all
is that there was never a choice.
All of nature’s order could not beat back
the encroachment of a new religion.

Too Late

Pale rider, riding an iron horse.
Calling out in single-note warnings.
They drone from tower to tower,
touching all the glass all the way down.

You have no defense—
the rider is for you, but it’s not stopping.
You get to hear the warning,
but not heed it.
It’s time but it’s also too late.

The Misanthrope’s Philosophy

The worms eat at the periphery of meaning.
There is no center;
there is no holding back the march of insects.

Civilization? A civilization of bugs.
A civilization of disease worshippers,
with their hungry bodies cut wide open.

Blood, heart’s blood, gathers infection
for maggots to feast.
Watch how they dine so elegantly.

Once there were entrails,
but the seers went home early
for battered brains.

This is how the world ends.
Grotesque and apathetic.
Directing the desiccation to a new ocean.

Camp on the Cold Lake

Come up, conjuring.
She chants over the orange and red flames.
Resurrect and reassure
that this world isn’t boring.
Turn the cold water hot.
Bequeath ghost children,
ready to eat away all the Mondays.

She sings the blasphemy.
She hums the upside down hymnal.
She does everything to fill the nothing.

By midnight, the mass has ended.
No demons dared answer.
So she goes home to commit more pedestrian sins.

New Justinian

Bells ring behind houses,
sounding the end of days.
An empty tram scuttles on steel claws.
A yawn escapes into the night.
The city belongs to the walkers,
destined to go nowhere.

To Face Itself

Rather than sunshine on the sleeping swan,
these eyes see the moss on the cellar walls.
No pretty face or well-pressed dress
can impress like a miasma of menace
or the scum between the slats.

Pale and pallid are the figures
of this aristocratic form.
The rhymes rhyme with blood,
and have no trade with love.

The songs I sing are dirges all.
The notes hate the summer;
worship the Fall.
They are dirges all.

Pietro’s Castle

On the night we went to Pietro’s Castle,
the will-o-wisp on the lake
asked for souls to take.
We’d gladly offers ours now.

However, we were then recusants;
our knees un-bended
although our bellies were distended
through no fault of our own.

In madness not yet love,
we chased their yellow eyes,
all the while under the guise
of mocking their martyrdom.

The saints said nothing to us sinners,
but we know in a diseased way
that the little death lay
just beyond the hills.

I’ve since seen it as a suicide garden,
yet few memories remain so awake—
so eager to make
this old heart collapse with melancholy.

We both left too much at the castle gate.
Some that cannot be discussed,
others encrusted
with unmentionable feelings.

I wonder if you feel the same.
Can you recall the night in the fall
when insanity conquered all
and we just lived?

Benjamin Welton is the author of Hands Dabbled In Blood (Thought Catalogue, 2013), a study of twentieth century British literature and its relationship to revolutionary fervor. His poems, short stories, historical writing, and journalism have appeared in Seven Days, Vantage Point, Ravenous Monster, Schlock!, Death Throes, InYourSpeakers, Crime Magazine, Aberrant Labyrinth, and other publications. Welton graduated summa cum laude from West Virginia University with a BA in English and history. He served in the United States naval reserve, and holds an MA in English literature from the University of Vermont, where he taught basic English composition. He blogs at literarytrebuchet.blogspot.com and benjaminwelton.blogspot.com.

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What Rough Beast | Covid-19 Edition | 04 09 20 | B.S.Roberts

B.S.Roberts
Weekends

Two nights a week
two and a half days
my daughter is seven now
I already feel I’ve missed the last three years
she wraps her arms around my neck in tight hugs
whenever I see and leave her
“I don’t want to go!” she always cries
I don’t want her to go. I try not to cry
fifty-two weekends a year
quarantined
the virus eats them away
51
50
49

B.S.Roberts does not put a space between his first two initials and his last name. He makes a living as a museum curator and an administrative assistant at the University of Maine at Augusta. Pursuing a degree in ethnography and folklore, Roberts lives in Maine with his fiancée, daughter, silver pheasants, turtle, and four cats.

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