she smiles.

she offers him a drink.

each morning i practice for

getting that woman.

when her sister calls me sister

i remind myself

she is there.

this belief

in the magic of whiteness,

that it is the smooth

pebble in your hand,

that it is the godmother’s

best gift,

that it explains,

allows,

assures,

entitles,

that it can sprout singular blossoms

like jack’s bean

and singular verandas from which

to watch them rise,

it is a spell

winding round on itself,

grimms’ awful fable,

and it turns into capetown and johannesburg

as surely as the beanstalk leads

to the giant’s actual country

where jack lies broken at the

meadow’s edge

and the land is in ruins,

no magic, no anything.

why some people be mad at me sometimes

they ask me to remember

but they want me to remember

their memories

and i keep on remembering

mine.

sorrow song

for the eyes of the children,

the last to melt,

the last to vaporize,

for the lingering

eyes of the children, staring,

the eyes of the children of

buchenwald,

of viet nam and johannesburg,

for the eyes of the children

of nagasaki,

for the eyes of the children

of middle passage,

for cherokee eyes, ethiopian eyes,

russian eyes, american eyes,

for all that remains of the children,

their eyes,

staring at us, amazed to see

the extraordinary evil in

ordinary men.

them bones

them bones will

rise again

them bones

them bones will

walk again

them bones

them bones will

talk again

now hear

the word of The Lord

—Traditional

atlantic is a sea of bones,

my bones,

my elegant afrikans

connecting whydah and new york,

a bridge of ivory.

seabed they call it.

in its arms my early mothers sleep.

some women leapt with babies in their arms.

some women wept and threw the babies in.

maternal armies pace the atlantic floor.

i call my name into the roar of surf

and something awful answers.

cruelty. don’t talk to me about cruelty

or what I am capable of.

when i wanted the roaches dead i wanted them dead

and i killed them. i took a broom to their country

and smashed and sliced without warning

without stopping and i smiled all the time i was doing it.

it was a holocaust of roaches, bodies,

parts of bodies, red all over the ground.

i didn’t ask their names.

they had no names worth knowing.

now i watch myself whenever i enter a room.

i never know what i might do.

the lost women

i need to know their names

those women I would have walked with

jauntily the way men go in groups

swinging their arms, and the ones

those sweating women whom I would have joined

after a hard game to chew the fat

what would we have called each other laughing

joking into our beer? where are my gangs,

my teams, my mislaid sisters?

all the women who could have known me,

where in the world are their names?

my dream about the cows

and then i see the cattle of my own town,

rustled already,

prodded by pale cowboys with a foreign smell

into dark pens built to hold them forever,

and then i see a few of them

rib thin and weeping low over

sparse fields and milkless lives but

standing somehow standing,

and then i see how all despair is

thin and weak and personal and

then i see it’s only

the dream about the cows.

my dream about the second coming

mary is an old woman without shoes.

she doesn’t believe it.

not when her belly starts to bubble

and leave the print of a finger where

no man touches.

not when the snow in her hair melts away.

not when the stranger she used to wait for

appears dressed in lights at her

kitchen table.

she is an old woman and

doesn’t believe it.

when Something drops onto her toes one night

she calls it a fox

but she feeds it.

the death of thelma sayles

2/13/59

age 44

i leave no tracks so my live loves

can’t follow. at the river

most turn back, their souls shivering,

but my little girl stands alone on the bank

and watches. i pull my heart out of my pocket

and throw it. i smile as she catches all

she’ll ever catch and heads for home

and her children. mothering

has made it strong, i whisper in her ear

along the leaves.

the message of thelma sayles

baby, my only husband turned away.

for twenty years my door was open.

nobody ever came.

the first fit broke my bed.

i woke from ecstasy to ask

what blood is this? am i the bride of Christ?

my bitten tongue was swollen for three days.

i thrashed and rolled from fit to death.

you are my only daughter.

when you lie awake in the evenings

counting your birthdays

turn the blood that clots your tongue

into poems. poems.

the death of joanne c.

11/30/82

aged 21

i am the battleground that

shrieks like a girl.

to myself i call myself

gettysburg. laughing,

twisting the i.v.,

laughing or crying, i can’t tell

which anymore,

i host the furious battling of

a suicidal body and

a murderous cure.

enter my mother

wearing a peaked hat.

her cape billows,

her broom sweeps the nurses away,

she is flying, the witch of the ward, my mother

pulls me up by the scruff of the spine

incanting Live Live Live!

leukemia as white rabbit

running always running murmuring

she will be furious she will be

furious, following a great

cabbage of a watch that tells only

terminal time, down deep into a

rabbit hole of diagnosticians shouting

off with her hair off with her skin and

i am i am i am furious.

chemotherapy

my hair is pain.

my mouth is a cave of cries.

my room is filled with white coats

shaped like God.

they are moving their fingers along

their stethoscopes.

they are testing their chemical faith.

chemicals chemicals oh mother mary

where is your living child?

the message of jo

my body is a war

nobody is winning.

my birthdays are tired.

my blood is a white flag,

waving.

surrender,

my darling mother,

death is life.

the death of fred clifton

11/10/84

age 49

i seemed to be drawn

to the center of myself

leaving the edges of me

in the hands of my wife

and i saw with the most amazing

clarity

so that i had not eyes but

sight,

and, rising and turning

through my skin,

there was all around not the

shapes of things

but oh, at last, the things

themselves.

“i’m going back to my true identity”

fjc 11/84

i was ready to return

to my rightful name.

i saw it hovering near

in blazoned script

and, passing through fire,

i claimed it. here

is a box of stars

for my living wife.

tell her to scatter them

pronouncing no name.

tell her there is no deathless name

a body can pronounce.

in white america

1    i come to read them poems

i come to read them poems,

a fancy trick i do

like juggling with balls of light.

stand, a dark spinner,

in the grange hall,

in the library, in the

smaller conference room,

and toss and catch as if by magic,

my eyes bright, my mouth smiling,

my singed hands burning.

2    the history

1800’s in this town

fourteen longhouses

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