Robert Beveridge makes noise(xterminal.bandcamp.com) and writes poetry in Akron, OH. Recent/upcoming appearances in Pink Litter, Triadæ, and Welter, among others.
BLACK-EYED SUSAN
petals fall apart in heavy wind like that from a belt cocked back, cracked across your face
BLUES SONG FOR FEDERICO GARCIA LORCA
Look at that old dog he only got one eye look at that old dog he only got one eye and that sparrow on the branch turns somersaults the man who own the dog he play piano look at that old dog he only got one eye.
CRISIS ACTOR
You took shakes from monsters and fed them to concertgoers, high school students, talk show hosts. You stuck a licked finger in the wind and walked east against the fog. You asked for miracles not from a god you never believed in but from all the other gods no one else believes in, either. You asked for extra habaneros on your footlong and mandarin oranges on your pizza and you’ll share with anyone who’s willing. You kissed a thousand frogs and not one turned into a prince but you have to wonder if the next one who pops out of the pond will be your own Whit, your own Romeo, your own Uncle Ted. You have grasped the basics, now it’s time for the final exam.
WEAKENED
If you were a spider in my dream it’s possible I might have asked you to bite me, inject some of that venom, turn my arteries green so that when I woke up I would fumble around on the nightstand for pen and pad, write lines that would be semi-intelligible the next day, try to translate my own penmanship and then take the finished product with its bloody green ink and wad it up and shove it into my mouth and not chew it but suck on it and send it back through my body for another revision
good for the creativity you said on Sunday afternoon as we lay on a bed of our clothes in your back garden, no rain for seven days but mist heavy in the air with a slight green tinge in front of your alter to Baron Samedi and the wildflowers you planted around it two weeks ago there is a fence between us and the alley but no privacy from the windows around us least of all from your roommate’s eager second- story eyes I want to go back to that most ancient of worlds I draw you into the poem lines on your arms, belly, breasts, a mandala whose words we will forget someday but the image of greenblood words on your freckled skin is as forever as forever gets, revives us, opens us, speaks words our mouths have not yet discovered how to form and how your teeth break skin and it feels like the sap of wildflower the altar offers us iced rum and cigars, a mug of Sharpies. A daddy longlegs skitters over a word on your thigh I can’t quite make out drained, we sleep even beneath the eyes of the voyeur on the second floor