anus tight, when
   my man look in
   the light blue eyes.
   He thinks
   He don't play
   His Afro crown raises
   eyes. Raises eyebrows
   of wonder and dark
   envy when he, combed
   out, hits the street.
   He sleek
   Dashiki
   Wax-printed on his skin
   remembrances of Congo dawns
   laced across his chest.
   Red Blood Red and Black.
   He bought
   O he got
   Malcolm's paper
   back. Checked out the
   photo, caught a few godly lines. Then wondered how
   many wives/daughters of
   Honky (miscalled The Man)
   bird snake
   caught, dug them both.
   (Him, Fro-ed Dashiki-ed
   and the book.)
   He stashed
   He stands stashed
   Near, too near the MLK
   Library. P.S. naught
   naught naught. Breathing
   slaughter on the Malcolm X
   Institute. Whole fist
   balled, fingers pressing
   palm. Shooting up through
   Honky's blue-eyed sky.
   “BLACK IS!”
   “NATION TIME!”
   “TOMORROW'S GLORY HERE TODAY”
   Pry free the hand
   Observe our Black present.
   There lie soft on that
   copper palm, a death of
   coke. A kill of horse
   eternal night's barbiturates.
   One hundred youths
   sped down to
   Speed.
   He right
   O he bad He badder than death
   yet gives no sweet
   release.
   Chicken-Licken
   She was afraid of men,
   sin and the humors
   of the night.
   When she saw a bed
   locks clicked
   in her brain.
   She screwed a frown
   around and plugged
   it in the keyhole.
   Put a chain across
   her door and closed
   her mind.
   Her bones were found
   round thirty years later
   when they razed
   her building to
   put up a parking lot.
   Autopsy read:
   dead of acute peoplelessness.
   I Almost Remember
   I almost remember
   smiling some years past
   even combing the ceiling
   with the teeth of a laugh
   (longer ago than the
   smile).
   Open night news-eyed I watch
   channels of hunger
   written on children's faces
   bursting bellies balloon
   in the air of my day room.
   There was a smile, I recall
   now jelled in
   a never yester glow. Even a laugh
   that tickled the tits of
   heaven
   (older than the smile).
   In graphs, afraid, I see the black
   brown hands and
   white thin yellowed fingers
   Slip slipping from the
   ledge of life. Forgotten by
   all but hatred.
   Ignored
   by all but disdain.
   On late evenings when
   quiet inhabits my garden
   when grass sleeps and
   streets are only paths for silent
   mist
   I seem to remember
   Smiling.
   Prisoner
   Even sunlight dares
   and trembles through
   my bars
   to shimmer
   dances on
   the floor.
   A clang of
   lock and
   keys and heels
   and blood-dried
   guns.
   Even sunshine
   dares.
   It's jail
   and bail
   then rails to run.
   Guard grey men
   serve plates of rattle
   noise and concrete
   death and beans.
   Then pale sun stumbles
   through the poles of
   iron to warm the horror
   of grey guard men.
   It's jail
   and bail
   then rails to run.
   Black night. The me
   myself of me sleeks
   in the folds and history
   of fear. To secret hold
   me deep and close my
   ears of lulls and clangs
   and memory of hate.
   Then night and sleep
   and dreams.
   It's jail
   and bail
   then rails to run.
   Woman Me
   Your smile, delicate
   rumor of peace.
   Deafening revolutions nestle in the
   cleavage of
   your breasts.
   Beggar-Kings and red-ringed Priests
   seek glory at the meeting
   of your thighs.
   A grasp of Lions. A lap of Lambs.
   Your tears, jeweled
   strewn a diadem
   caused Pharaohs to ride
   deep in the bosom of the
   Nile. Southern spas lash fast
   their doors upon the night when
   winds of death blow down your name
   A bride of hurricanes. A swarm of summer wind.
   Your laughter, pealing tall
   above the bells of ruined cathedrals.
   Children reach between your teeth
   for charts to live their lives.
   A stomp of feet. A bevy of swift hands.
   John J
   His soul curdled
   standing milk
   childhood's right gone wrong.
   Plum-blue skin brown dusted
   eyes black shining.
   (His momma didn't want him.)
   The round head slick silk
   Turn-around, fall-down curls.
   Old ladies smelling of flour
   and talcum powder, Cashmere Bouquet, said
   “This child is pretty enough to be a girl.”
   (But his momma didn't want him.)
   John J. grinned a “How can you resist me?”
   and danced to conjure lightning from
   a morning's summer sky.
   Gave the teacher an apple kiss.
   (But his momma didn't want him.)
   His nerves stretched two thousand miles
   found a flinging singing lady,
   breasting a bar
   calling straights on the dice,
   gin over ice,
   and the 30's version of
   everybody in the
   pool.
   (She didn't want him.)
   Southeast Arkanasia
   After Eli Whitney's gin
   brought to generations’ end
   bartered flesh and broken bones
   Did it cleanse you of your sin
   Did you ponder?
   Now, when farmers bury wheat
   and the cow men dump the sweet
   butter down on Davy Jones
   Does it sanctify your street
   Do you wonder?
   Or is guilt your nightly mare
   bucking wake your evenings’ share
   of the stilled repair of groans
   and the absence of despair
   over yonder?
   Song for the Old Ones
   My Fathers sit on benches
   their flesh counts every plank
   the slats leave dents of darkness
   deep in their withered flanks.
   They nod like broken candles
   all waxed and burnt profound
   they say “It's understanding
   that makes the world go round.”
					     					 			r />
   There in those pleated faces
   I see the auction block
   the chains and slavery's coffles
   the whip and lash and stock.
   My Fathers speak in voices
   that shred my fact and sound
   they say “It's our submission
   that makes the world go round.”
   They used the finest cunning
   their naked wits and wiles
   the lowly Uncle Tomming
   and Aunt Jemimas’ smiles.
   They've laughed to shield their crying
   then shuffled through their dreams and
   stepped ‘n’ fetched a country
   to write the blues with screams.
   I understand their meaning
   it could and did derive
   from living on the edge of death
   They kept my race alive.
   Child Dead in Old Seas
   Father,
   I wait for you in oceans
   tides washing pyramids high
   above my head.
   Waves, undulating
   corn rows around my
   black feet.
   The heavens shift and
   stars find holes set
   new in dark infirmity.
   My search goes on.
   Dainty shells on ash-like wrists
   of debutantes remember you.
   Childhood's absence has
   not stilled your
   voice. My ear
   listens. You whisper
   on the watery passage.
   Deep dirges moan
   from the
   belly of the sea
   and your song
   floats to me
   of lost savannahs
   green and
   drums. Of palm trees bending
   woman-like swaying
   grape-blue children laugh on beaches
   of sand as
   white as your bones
   clean
   on the foot of
   long-ago waters.
   Father.
   I wait for you
   wrapped in
   the entrails of
   whales. Your
   blood now
   blues
   spume
   over
   the rippled
   surface of our
   grave.
   Take Time Out
   When you see them
   on a freeway hitching rides
   wearing beads
   with packs by their sides
   you ought to ask
   What's all the
   warring and the jarring
   and the
   killing and
   the thrilling
   all about.
   Take Time Out.
   When you see him
   with a band around his head
   and an army surplus bunk
   that makes his bed
   you'd better ask
   What's all the
   beating and
   the cheating and
   the bleeding and
   the needing
   all about.
   Take Time Out.
   When you see her walking
   barefoot in the rain
   and you know she's tripping
   on a one-way train
   you need to ask
   What's all the
   lying and the
   dying and
   the running and
   the gunning
   all about.
   Take Time Out.
   Use a minute
   feel some sorrow
   for the folks
   who think tomorrow
   is a place that they
   can call up
   on the phone.
   Take a month
   and show some kindness
   for the folks
   who thought that blindness
   was an illness that
   affected eyes alone.
   If you know that youth
   is dying on the run
   and my daughter trades
   dope stories with your son
   we'd better see
   what all our
   fearing and our jeering and our
   crying and
   our lying
   brought about.
   Take Time Out.
   Elegy
   FOR HARRIET TUBMAN & FREDRICK DOUGLASS
   I lie down in my grave
   and watch my children
   grow
   Proud blooms
   above the weeds of death.
   Their petals wave
   and still nobody
   knows the soft black
   dirt that is my winding
   sheet. The worms, my friends,
   yet tunnel holes in
   bones and through those
   apertures I see the rain.
   The sunfelt warmth
   now jabs
   within my space and
   brings me roots of my
   children born.
   Their seeds must fall
   and press beneath
   this earth,
   and find me where
   I wait. My only need to
   fertilize their birth.
   I lie down in my grave
   and watch my children
   grow.
   Reverses
   How often must we
   butt to head
   Mind to ass
   flank to nuts
   cock to elbow
   hip to toe
   soul to shoulder
   confront ourselves
   in our past.
   Little Girl Speakings
   Ain't nobody better'n my Daddy,
   you keep yo’ quauter,
   I ain't yo’ daughter,
   Ain't nobody better'n my Daddy.
   Ain't nothing prettier'n my dollie,
   heard what I said,
   don't pat her head,
   Ain't nothing prettier'n my dollie.
   No lady cookinger than my Mommy,
   smell that pie,
   see I don't lie,
   No lady cookinger than my Mommy.
   This Winter Day
   The kitchen is its readiness
   white green and orange things
   leak their blood selves in the soup.
   Ritual sacrifice that snaps
   an odor at my nose and starts
   my tongue to march
   slipping in the liquid of its drip.
   The day, silver striped
   in rain, is balked against
   my window and the soup.
   This book is dedicated
   to a few
   oj the Good Guys
   You to laugh with
   You to cry to
   I can just about make
   it over
   JESSICA MITFORD
   GERARD W. PURCELL
   JAY ALLEN
   A Kind of Love, Some Say
   Is it true the ribs can tell
   The kick of a beast from a
   Lover's fist? The bruised
   Bones recorded well
   The sudden shock, the
   Hard impact. Then swollen lids,
   Sorry eyes, spoke not
   Of lost romance, but hurt.
   Hate often is confused. Its
   Limits are in zones beyond itself. And
   Sadists will not learn that
   Love, by nature, exacts a pain
   Unequalled on the rack.
   Country Lover
   Funky blues
   Keen toed shoes
   High water pants
   Saddy night dance
   Red soda water
   and anybody's daughter
   Remembrance
   FOR PAUL
   Your hands easy
   weight, teasing the bees
   hived in my hair, your smile at the
   slope of my cheek. On the
   occasion, you press
   above me, glowing, spouting
   readiness, mystery rapes
					     					 			 />   my reason.
   When you have withdrawn
   your self and the magic, when
   only the smell of your
   love lingers between
   my breasts, then, only
   then, can I greedily consume
   your presence.
   Where We Belong, A Duet
   In every town and village,
   In every city square,
   In crowded places
   I searched the faces
   Hoping to find Someone to care.
   I read mysterious meanings
   In the distant stars,
   Then I went to schoolrooms
   And poolrooms
   And half-lighted cocktail bars.
   Braving dangers,
   Going with strangers,
   I don't even remember their names.
   I was quick and breezy
   And always easy
   Playing romantic games.
   I wined and dined a thousand exotic Joans and Janes
   In dusty dance halls, at debutante balls,
   On lonely country lanes.
   I fell in love forever,
   Twice every year or so.
   I wooed them sweetly, was theirs completely,
   But they always let me go.
   Saying bye now, no need to try now,
   You don't have the proper charms. Too sentimental and much too gentle
   I don't tremble in your arms.
   Then you rose into my life
   Like a promised sunrise.
   Brightening my days with the light in your eyes.
   I've never been so strong,
   Now I'm where I belong.
   Phenomenal Woman
   Pretty women wonder where my secret lies.
   I'm not cute or built to suit a fashion model's size