Mantis 21 (Summer 2023)
New Poetry
Daisy Bassen
Plimoth, during the next wave of plague
Pretending to be a colonizer forty hours a week
Isn’t a bad gig: you get a name, a real one,
Unlike the adolescent sows, and a backstory
Instead of a date with the butcher to become
Spare-ribs and chops. No one is assigned
Dorothy Bradford grappling with melancholia
Or a future she never wanted, choosing
The water, lingering down among the cast-off
Clamshells, more present yet than all the men
And their statues—
None of the windows
Have panes, only shutters, so the only mask
You need is your character, your insistence
You don’t know what a protractor is
While you explain the quadrant, the steel point
In your mind the whole time you talk
About right angles, how your high school drama
Coach would say you’re not inhabiting the role
Enough, colonizing the colonizer. Just adding
A syllable to the world question, quest-i-on,
And putting up with the bitch of worsted stockings.
Other places are hiring, bonuses abound, but the man
You are already died once and you’re fond of him
Now and the view of the cove, blue blue blue
From the meeting-house’s battlements, frames
Of film cut to the floor. They never fired once
On an enemy and what could they have accomplished
That pox didn’t, the pigs in the street ready to turn, run
Feral? You tell yourself it’s an electuary, the honey
Keeping it from spoiling, but you’ll be damned
If you come back next year, tell yourself it wasn’t
All a mistake, lie as you lie to the tourists, lie
Even when they don’t ask you anything, wandering by.
DAISY BASSEN is a poet and community child psychiatrist who graduated from Princeton University’s Creative Writing Program and completed her medical training at The University of Rochester and Brown. Her work has been published in Salamander, McSweeney’s, Smartish Pace, Crab Creek Review, Little Patuxent Review, and [PANK] among other journals. She was the winner of the So to Speak 2019 Poetry Contest, the 2019 ILDS White Mice Contest, the 2020 Beullah Rose Poetry Prize, and the 2022 Erskine J Poetry Prize. Born and raised in New York, she lives in Rhode Island with her family.