Copyright © 1971 by Maya Angelou
   All rights reserved under International
   and Pan-American Copyright Conventions.
   Published in the United States by
   Random House, Inc., New York,
   and simultaneously in Canada
   by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.
   The following poems were first published in
   The Poetry of Maya Angelou and are reprinted
   by permission of Hirt Music Inc.
   Copyright © 1969 by Hirt Music Inc.:
   “They Went Home,” “The Gamut,”
   “To a Man,” “No Loser, No Weeper,”
   “When You Come to Me, “Remembering,”
   “In a Time,” “Tears,” “The Detached,”
   “To a Husband,” “Accident,” “Let’s
   Majeste” or the “Ego and I,”
   “On Diverse Deviations,” “Mourning Grace,”
   “Sounds Like Pearls,” “When I Think
   About Myself,” “Letter to an Aspiring
   Junkie,” “Miss Scarlett, Mr. Rhett & Other
   Latter-Day Saints,” “Faces,” “To a Freedom
   Fighter,” “Riot: 60’s,” “No No No No,”
   “Black Ode,” “My Guilt,” “The Calling of
   Names,” “On Working White Liberals,”
   “Sepia Fashion Show,” “The Thirteens
   (Black),” “The Thirteens (White),”
   “Harlem Hopscotch.”
   Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 70-156964
   eISBN: 978-0-307-83327-3
   Random House Website address:
   http://www.randomhouse.com/
   v3.1
   To AMBER SAM
   and the ZORRO MAN
   CONTENTS
   Cover
   Title Page
   Copyright
   Dedication
   PART ONE
   Where Love Is a Scream of Anguish They Went Home
   The Gamut
   A Zorro Man
   To a Man
   Late October
   No Loser, No Weeper
   When You Come to Me
   Remembering
   In a Time
   Tears
   The Detached
   To a Husband
   Accident
   Let’s Majeste
   After
   The Mothering Blackness
   On Diverse Deviations
   Mourning Grace
   How I Can Lie to You
   Sounds Like Pearls
   PART TWO
   Just Before the World Ends When I Think About Myself
   On a Bright Day, Next Week
   Letter to an Aspiring Junkie
   Miss Scarlett, Mr. Rhett and Other Latter-Day Saints
   Times-Square-Shoeshine-Composition
   Faces
   To a Freedom Fighter
   Riot: 60’s
   We Saw Beyond Our Seeming
   Black Ode
   No No No No
   My Guilt
   The Calling of Names
   On Working White Liberals
   Sepia Fashion Show
   The Thirteens (Black)
   The Thirteens (White)
   Harlem Hopscotch
   Other Books by This Author
   About the Author
   PART ONE
   Where Love Is a Scream of Anguish
   They Went Home
   They went home and told their wives,
   that never once in all their lives,
   had they known a girl like me,
   But … They went home.
   They said my house was licking clean,
   no word I spoke was ever mean,
   I had an air of mystery,
   But … They went home.
   My praises were on all men’s lips,
   they liked my smile, my wit, my hips,
   they’d spend one night, or two or three.
   But …
   The Gamut
   Soft you day, be velvet soft,
   My true love approaches,
   Look you bright, you dusty sun,
   Array your golden coaches.
   Soft you wind, be soft as silk
   My true love is speaking.
   Hold you birds, your silver throats,
   His golden voice I’m seeking.
   Come you death, in haste, do come
   My shroud of black be weaving,
   Quiet my heart, be deathly quiet,
   My true love is leaving.
   A Zorro Man
   Here
   in the wombed room
   silk purple drapes
   flash a light as subtle
   as your hands before
   love-making
   Here
   in the covered lens
   I catch a
   clitoral image of
   your general inhabitation
   long and like a
   late dawn in winter
   Here
   this clean mirror
   traps me unwilling
   in a gone time
   when I was love
   and you were booted and brave
   and trembling for me.
   To a Man
   My man is
   Black Golden Amber
   Changing.
   Warm mouths of Brandy Fine
   Cautious sunlight on a patterned rug
   Coughing laughter, rocked on a whorl of French tobacco
   Graceful turns on woolen stilts
   Secretive?
   A cat’s eye.
   Southern. Plump and tender with navy bean sullenness
   And did I say “Tender”?
   The gentleness
   A big cat stalks through stubborn bush
   And did I mention “Amber”?
   The heatless fire consuming itself.
   Again. Anew. Into ever neverlessness.
   My man is Amber
   Changing
   Always into itself
   New. Now New.
   Still itself.
   Still.
   Late October
   Carefully
   the leaves of autumn
   sprinkle down the tinny
   sound of little dyings
   and skies sated
   of ruddy sunsets
   of roseate dawns
   roil ceaselessly in
   cobweb greys and turn
   to black
   for comfort.
   Only lovers
   see the fall
   a signal end to endings
   a gruffish gesture alerting
   those who will not be alarmed
   that we begin to stop
   in order simply
   to begin
   again.
   No Loser, No Weeper
   “I hate to lose something,”
   then she bent her head
   “even a dime, I wish I was dead.
   I can’t explain it. No more to be said.
   Cept I hate to lose something.”
   “I lost a doll once and cried for a week.
   She could open her eyes, and do all but speak.
   I believe she was took, by some doll-snatching-sneak
   I tell you, I hate to lose something.”
   “A watch of mine once, got up and walked away.
   It had twelve numbers on it and for the time of day.
   I’ll never forget it and all I can say
   Is I really hate to lose something.”
   “Now if I felt that way bout a watch and a toy,
   What you think I feel bout my lover-boy?
   I ain’t threatening you madam, but he is my evening’s joy.
   An 
					     					 			d I mean I really hate to lose something.”
   When You Come to Me
   When you come to me, unbidden,
   Beckoning me
   To long-ago rooms,
   Where memories lie.
   Offering me, as to a child, an attic,
   Gatherings of days too few.
   Baubles of stolen kisses.
   Trinkets of borrowed loves.
   Trunks of secret words,
   I CRY.
   Remembering
   Soft grey ghosts crawl up my sleeve
   to peer into my eyes
   while I within deny their threats
   and answer them with lies.
   Mushlike memories perform
   a ritual on my lips
   I lie in stolid hopelessness
   and they lay my soul in strips.
   In a Time
   In a time of secret wooing
   Today prepares tomorrow’s ruin
   Left knows not what right is doing
   My heart is torn asunder.
   In a time of furtive sighs
   Sweet hellos and sad goodbyes
   Half-truths told and entire lies
   My conscience echoes thunder
   In a time when kingdoms come
   Joy is brief as summer’s fun
   Happiness, its race has run
   Then pain stalks in to plunder.
   Tears
   Tears
   The crystal rags
   Viscous tatters
   of a worn-through soul
   Moans
   Deep swan song
   Blue farewell
   of a dying dream.
   The Detached
   We die,
   Welcoming Bluebeards to our darkening closets,
   Stranglers to our outstretched necks.
   Stranglers, who neither care nor
   care to know that
   DEATH IS INTERNAL.
   We pray,
   Savoring sweet the teethed lies,
   Bellying the grounds before alien gods
   Gods, who neither know nor
   wish to know that
   HELL IS INTERNAL.
   We love,
   Rubbing the nakednesses with gloved hands
   Inverting our mouths in tongued kisses,
   Kisses that neither touch nor
   care to touch if
   LOVE IS INTERNAL.
   To a Husband
   Your voice at times a fist
   Tight in your throat
   Jabs ceaselessly at phantoms
   In the room,
   Your hand a carved and
   skimming boat
   Goes down the Nile
   To point out Pharoah’s tomb.
   You’re Africa to me
   At brightest dawn.
   The Congo’s green and
   Copper’s brackish hue,
   A continent to build
   With Black Man’s brawn.
   I sit at home and see it all
   Through you.
   Accident
   tonight
   when you spread your pallet
   of magic,
   I escaped.
   sitting apart,
   I saw you grim and unkempt.
   Your vulgar-ness
   not of living
   your demands
   not from need.
   tonight
   as you sprinkled your brain-dust
   of rainbows,
   I had no eyes.
   Seeing all
   I saw the colors fade
   and change.
   The blood, red dulled
   through the dyes,
   and the naked
   Black-White truth.
   Let’s Majeste
   I sit a throne upon the times
   when Kings are rare and
   Consorts
   slide into the grease of scullery maids.
   So gaily wave a crown of light
   (astride the royal chair) that blinds
   the commoners who genuflect and cross their fingers.
   The years will lie beside me
   on the queenly bed.
   And coupled we’ll await
   the ages’ dust to cake my lids again.
   And when the rousing kiss is given,
   why must it always be a fairy, and
   only just a Prince?
   After
   No sound falls
   from the moaning sky
   No scowl wrinkles
   the evening pool
   The stars lean down
   A stony brilliance
   While birds fly
   The market leers
   its empty shelves
   Streets bare bosoms
   to scanty cars
   This bed yawns
   beneath the weight
   of our absent selves.
   The Mothering Blackness
   She came home running
   back to the mothering blackness
   deep in the smothering blackness
   white tears icicle gold plains of her face
   She came home running
   She came down creeping
   here to the black arms waiting
   now to the warm heart waiting
   rime of alien dreams befrost her rich brown face
   She came down creeping
   She came home blameless
   black yet as Hagar’s daughter
   tall as was Sheba’s daughter
   threats of northern winds die on the desert’s face
   She came home blameless
   On Diverse Deviations
   When love is a shimmering curtain
   Before a door of chance
   That leads to a world in question
   Wherein the macabrous dance
   Of bones that rattle in silence
   Of blinded eyes and rolls
   Of thick lips thin, denying
   A thousand powdered moles,
   Where touch to touch is feel
   And life a weary whore
   I would be carried off, not gently
   To a shore,
   Where love is the scream of anguish
   And no curtain drapes the door.
   Mourning Grace
   If today, I follow death
   go down its trackless wastes,
   salt my tongue on hardened tears
   for my precious dear times waste
   race
   along that promised cave in a headlong
   deadlong
   haste,
   Will you
   have
   the
   grace
   to mourn for
   me?
   How I Can Lie to You
   now thread my voice
   with lies
   of lightness
   force within
   my mirror eyes
   the cold disguise
   of sad and wise
   decisions.
   Sounds Like Pearls
   Sounds
   Like pearls
   Roll off your tongue
   To grace this eager ebon ear.
   Doubt and fear,
   Ungainly things,
   With blushings
   Disappear.
   PART TWO
   Just Before the World Ends
   When I Think About Myself
   When I think about myself,
   I almost laugh myself to death,
   My life has been one great big joke,
   A dance that’s walked
   A song that’s spoke,
   I laugh so hard I almost choke
   When I think about myself.
   Sixty years in these folks’ world
   The child I works for calls me girl
   I say “Yes ma’am” for working’s sake.
   Too proud to bend
   Too poor to break,
   I laugh until my stomach ache,
   When I think about myself.
   My folks can make me split my side,
   I laughed so hard I nearly died,
   The tales they t 
					     					 			ell, sound just like lying,
   They grow the fruit,
   But eat the rind,
   I laugh until I start to crying,
   When I think about my folks.
   On a Bright Day, Next Week
   On a bright day, next week
   Just before the bomb falls
   Just before the world ends,
   Just before I die
   All my tears will powder
   Black in dust like ashes
   Black like Buddha’s belly
   Black and hot and dry
   Then will mercy tumble
   Falling down in godheads
   Falling on the children
   Falling from the sky
   Letter to an Aspiring Junkie
   Let me hip you to the streets,
   Jim,
   Ain’t nothing happening.
   Maybe some tomorrows gone up in smoke,
   raggedy preachers, telling a joke
   to lonely, son-less old ladies’ maids.
   Nothing happening,
   Nothing shakin’, Jim.
   A slough of young cats riding that
   cold, white horse,
   a grey old monkey on their back, of course
   does rodeo tricks.
   No haps, man.
   No haps.
   A worn-out pimp, with a space-age conk,
   setting up some fool for a game of tonk,
   or poker or
   get ’em dead and alive.