in tall grasses,
   and even elephants
   lumber after safety.
   When great trees fall
   in forests,
   small things recoil into silence,
   their senses
   eroded beyond fear.
   When great souls die,
   the air around us becomes
   light, rare, sterile.
   We breathe briefly.
   our eyes, briefly,
   see with
   a hurtful clarity.
   Our memory, suddenly sharpened,
   examines,
   gnaws on kind words
   unsaid,
   promised walks
   never taken.
   Great souls die and
   our reality, bound to
   them, takes leave of us.
   Our souls,
   dependent upon their
   nurture,
   now shrink, wizened.
   Our minds, formed
   and informed by their
   radiance,
   fall away.
   We are not so much maddened
   as reduced to the unutterable ignorance
   of dark, cold
   caves.
   And when great souls die,
   after a period peace blooms,
   slowly and always
   irregularly. Spaces fill
   with a kind of
   soothing electric vibration.
   Our senses, restored, never
   to be the same, whisper to us,
   They existed. They existed.
   We can be. Be and be
   better. For they existed.
   A BLACK WOMAN
   SPEAKS TO
   BLACK MANHOOD
   READ BY THE POET AT THE MILLION MAN MARCH IN WASHINGTON, D.C., ON OCTOBER 16, 1995
   Our souls look back
   In wondrous surprise
   At how we have made it
   So far from where we started
   Fathers, brothers, uncles
   Nephews, sons, and friends
   Look over your shoulders
   And at our history
   The night was long
   The wounds were deep
   The pit has been dark
   Its walls were steep
   I was dragged by braids
   On a sandy beach
   I was pulled near you
   But beyond your reach
   You were bound and gagged
   When you heard me cry
   Your spirit was wounded
   With each wrenching try
   For you thrusted and pulled
   Trying to break free
   So that neither of us
   Would know slavery
   You forgot the strength
   Of the rope and the chain
   You only remember
   Your manhood shame
   You couldn’t help yourself
   And you couldn’t help me
   You’ve carried that fact
   Down our history
   We have survived
   Those centuries of hate
   And we do not deny
   Their bruising weight
   Please my many million men
   Let us lay that image aside
   See how our people today
   Walk in strength and in pride
   Celebrate, stand up, clap hands for ourselves
   and those who went before
   Stand up, clap hands, let us welcome kind
   words back into our vocabulary
   Stand up, clap hands, let us welcome
   courtesies back into our bedrooms
   Stand up, clap hands, let us invite generosity
   back into our kitchens
   Clap hands, let faith find a place in our souls
   Clap hands, let hope live in our hearts
   We have survived
   And even thrived with
   Passion
   Compassion
   Humor
   and style
   The night was long
   The wounds were deep
   The pit was dark
   Its walls were steep
   Clap hands, celebrate
   We deserve it
   Jubilate!
   AMAZING PEACE
   READ BY THE POET AT THE LIGHTING OF THE NATIONAL CHRISTMAS TREE, WASHINGTON, D.C., DECEMBER 1, 2005
   Thunder rumbles in the mountain passes
   And lightning rattles the eaves of our houses.
   Floodwaters await in our avenues.
   Snow falls upon snow, falls upon snow
   to avalanche
   Over unprotected villages.
   The sky slips low and gray and threatening.
   We question ourselves. What have we done to
   so affront nature?
   We interrogate and worry God.
   Are you there? Are you there, really?
   Does the covenant you made with us still
   hold?
   Into this climate of fear and apprehension,
   Christmas enters,
   Streaming lights of joy, ringing bells of hope
   And singing carols of forgiveness high up in
   the bright air.
   The world is encouraged to come away from
   rancor,
   Come the way of friendship.
   It is the Glad Season.
   Thunder ebbs to silence and lightning sleeps
   quietly in the corner.
   Floodwaters recede into memory.
   Snow becomes a yielding cushion to aid us
   As we make our way to higher ground.
   Hope is born again in the faces of children.
   It rides on the shoulders of our aged as they
   walk into their sunsets.
   Hope spreads around the earth, brightening
   all things,
   Even hate, which crouches breeding in dark
   corridors.
   In our joy, we think we hear a whisper.
   At first it is too soft. Then only half heard.
   We listen carefully as it gathers strength.
   We hear a sweetness.
   The word is Peace.
   It is loud now.
   Louder than the explosion of bombs.
   We tremble at the sound. We are thrilled by
   its presence.
   It is that for which we have hungered.
   Not just the absence of war. But true Peace.
   A harmony of spirit, a comfort of courtesies.
   Security for our beloveds and their beloveds.
   We clap hands and welcome the Peace of
   Christmas.
   We beckon this good season to wait awhile
   with us.
   We, Baptist and Buddhist, Methodist and
   Muslim, say come.
   Peace.
   Come and fill us and our world with your
   majesty.
   We, the Jew and the Jainist, the Catholic and
   the Confucian,
   Implore you to stay awhile with us
   So we may learn by your shimmering light
   How to look beyond complexion and see
   community.
   It is Christmas time, a halting of hate time.
   On this platform of peace, we can create a
   language
   To translate ourselves to ourselves and to
   each other.
   At this Holy Instant, we celebrate the Birth of
   Jesus Christ
   Into the great religions of the world.
   We jubilate the precious advent of trust.
   We shout with glorious tongues the coming of
   hope.
   All the earth’s tribes loosen their voices
   To celebrate the promise of Peace.
   We, Angels and Mortals, Believers and
   Nonbelievers,
   Look heavenward and speak the word aloud.
   Peace. We look at our world and speak the
   word aloud.
   Peace. We look at each other, then into
   ourselves,
					     					 			br />
   And we say without shyness or apology or
   hesitation:
   Peace, My Brother.
   Peace, My Sister.
   Peace, My Soul.
   MOTHER
   A Cradle to Hold Me
   It is true
   I was created in you.
   It is also true
   That you were created for me.
   I owned your voice.
   It was shaped and tuned to soothe me.
   Your arms were molded
   Into a cradle to hold me, to rock me.
   The scent of your body was the air
   Perfumed for me to breathe.
   Mother,
   During those early, dearest days
   I did not dream that you had
   A larger life which included me,
   Among your other concerns,
   For I had a life
   Which was only you.
   Time passed steadily and drew us apart.
   I was unwilling.
   I feared if I let you go
   You would leave me eternally.
   You smiled at my fears, saying
   I could not stay in your lap forever
   That one day you would have to stand
   And where would I be?
   You smiled again.
   I did not.
   Without warning you left me,
   But you returned immediately.
   You left again and returned,
   I admit, quickly.
   But relief did not rest with me easily.
   You left again, but again returned.
   You left again, but again returned.
   Each time you reentered my world
   You brought assurance.
   Slowly I gained confidence.
   You thought you knew me,
   But I did know you,
   You thought you were watching me,
   But I did hold you securely in my sight,
   Recording every movement,
   Memorizing your smiles, tracing your frowns.
   In your absence
   I rehearsed you,
   The way you had of singing
   On a breeze,
   While a sob lay
   At the root of your song.
   The way you posed your head
   So that the light could caress your face
   When you put your fingers on my hand
   And your hand on my arm,
   I was blessed with a sense of health,
   Of strength and very good fortune.
   You were always
   The heart of happiness to me,
   Bringing nougats of glee,
   Sweets of open laughter.
   I loved you even during the years
   When you knew nothing
   And I knew everything, I loved you still.
   Condescendingly of course,
   From my high perch
   Of teenage wisdom.
   I spoke sharply to you, often
   Because you were slow to understand.
   I grew older and
   Was stunned to find
   How much knowledge you had gleaned.
   And so quickly.
   Mother, I have learned enough now
   To know I have learned nearly nothing.
   On this day
   When mothers are being honored,
   Let me thank you
   That my selfishness, ignorance, and mockery
   Did not bring you to
   Discard me like a broken doll
   Which had lost its favor.
   I thank you that
   You still find something in me
   To cherish, to admire, and to love.
   I thank you, Mother.
   I love you.
   IN AND OUT
   OF TIME
   For Jessica and Colin Johnson
   Stephanie and Guy Johnson
   The sun has come out
   The mists have gone
   We see in the distance
   Our long way home
   I was yours to love
   You were always mine
   We have belonged together
   In and out of time
   When the first stone looked
   Up at the blazing sun
   And the first tree struggled
   From the forest floor
   I loved you more
   You were the rhythm on the head
   Of the conga drum
   And the brush of palm
   On my nut brown skin
   And I loved you then
   We worked the cane
   And cotton fields
   We trod together
   The city streets
   Wearied by labor
   Bruised by cruelty
   Strutting and sassy
   To our inner beat
   And all the while
   Lord, how I love your smile
   You’ve freed your braids
   Gave your hair to the breeze
   It hummed like a hive
   Of busy bees
   I reached into the mass
   For the honeycomb there
   God, how I loved your hair
   You saw me bludgeoned
   By circumstance
   Injured by hate
   And lost to chance
   Legs that could be broken
   But knees that would not bend
   Oh, you loved me then
   I raked the Heavens’ belly
   With torrid screams
   I fought to turn
   Nightmares into dreams
   My protests were loud
   And brash and bold
   My, how you loved my soul
   The sun has come out
   The mists have gone
   We see in the distance
   Our long way home
   I was yours to love
   And you were always mine
   We have belonged together
   In and out of time
   BEN LEAR’S
   BAR MITZVAH
   AN ODE TO BEN LEAR
   ON THE OCCASION OF HIS BAR MITZVAH
   To you
   in your walled city of childhood,
   the years have inched by slowly, tortoise—like
   crawling,
   yet to your family and family of friends
   the time has hurried, without halting,
   without leaving enough seasons in which
   to know you, to teach you, to love you.
   You have been noted studying the Torah,
   probing the words of ancient prophets
   reading,
   To many
   you have come too suddenly to the new
   region of manhood.
   To your parents,
   in whose immense realm of love
   you have been clasped and claimed,
   you are still the tender-tough boy,
   yet in your face, they see already the promise
   of the man you are becoming.
   To them
   you are too eager to step into the new land,
   too ready to share the responsibility
   with the citizens of your new country.
   Some of your beloveds are longing to hold you back in the safe arms
   of childhood,
   where errant behavior could meet with soft
   admonishment,
   where most injuries could be made better by
   a mother’s kiss,
   but even now you are leaning away toward
   the horizon
   with one foot raised to step forward.
   None can stop you, none can stay you.
   Please know,
   prayers lay in the road where you will plant
   your feet.
   Please know
   that aspirations of your family are high at
   your back, and surround you entirely.
   Please know
   that great hopes of your devoted shower
   you with
   ardent wishes for your being and for your
   future.
					     					 			 />
   Your beloveds
   know that you are entering a nation
   where you must learn the difference
   between seeking after justice
   and lusting for revenge.
   They know also
   that you will meet those who would be kind
   if only they had the courage, and
   those who would do evil
   if only they had the opportunity.
   You will be bathed in the morning dew of
   truth
   and you will drink down the brackish water of
   false witness.
   Be wary, my nephew, but fear only God,
   for you have a limitless resource of powerful
   love
   to evoke and call forth
   and I,
   prompt with all your primed and loving
   family,
   await your summons.
   VIGIL
   For Luther Vandross and Barry White
   We are born in pain, then relief comes.
   We are lost in the dark, then day breaks.
   We are confused, confounded, and fearful,
   Then faith takes our hand.
   We stumble and fumble and fall,
   Then, we rise.
   Into each of our meanest nights, you
   have arrived,
   Oh, Lord,
   Creator,
   To lead us away from our ignorance
   And into knowing.
   Now, we gather at your altar,
   Rich and poor, young and
   Achingly old,
   We are the housed and the homeless,
   We are the lucky,
   And the lazy.
   As if at the foot
   Of an ancient baobab tree,
   In this moment
   We gather to stand, kneel, sit, squat, and
   crumple here,
   Knowing that, when the medical geniuses
   Have done their best,
   When the Nobel Prize Winners
   Have used their most powerful energy,
   We have You.
   Creator,
   We bring to You
   Our brothers, sons, fathers, uncles,
   Nephews, cousins, beloved, and friends.
   We place the body of Luther Vandross
   And the body of Barry