Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Complete Collected Poems of Maya Angelou

    Page 2
    Prev Next


      Roll off your tongue

      To grace this eager ebon ear.

      Doubt and fear,

      Ungainly things,

      With blushings

      Disappear.

      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 tell 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

      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.

      The streets?

      Climb into the streets, man, like you climb

      into the ass end of a lion.

      Then it's fine.

      It's a bug-a-loo and a shing-a-ling,

      African dreams on a buck-and-a-wing and a prayer.

      That's the streets, man,

      Nothing happening.

      Miss Scarlett, Mr. Rhett and Other Latter-Day Saints

      Novitiates sing Ave

      Before the whipping posts,

      Crisscrossing their breasts and

      tearstained robes

      in the yielding dark.

      Animated by the human sacrifice

      (Golgotha in blackface)

      Priests glow purely white on the

      bas-relief of a plantation shrine.

      (O Sing)

      You are gone but not forgotten.

      Hail, Scarlett. Requiescat in pace.

      God-Makers smear brushes in

      blood/gall

      to etch frescoes on your

      ceilinged tomb.

      (O Sing)

      Hosanna, King Kotton.

      Shadowed couplings of infidels

      tempt stigmata from the nipples

      of your true believers.

      (Chant Maternoster)

      Hallowed Little Eva.

      Ministers make novena with the

      charred bones of four

      very small

      very black

      very young children

      (Intone DIXIE)

      And guard the relics

      of your intact hymen,

      daily putting to death,

      into eternity,

      The stud, his seed,

      His seed

      His seed.

      (O Sing)

      Hallelujah, pure Scarlett,

      Blessed Rhett, the Martyr.

      Times-Square-Shoeshine-Composition

      I'm the best that ever done it

      (pow pow)

      That's my title and I won it

      (pow pow)

      I ain't lying, I'm the best

      (pow pow)

      Come and put me to the test

      (pow pow)

      I'll clean ‘em till they squeak

      (pow pow)

      In the middle of next week

      (pow pow)

      I'll shine ‘em till they whine

      (pow pow)

      Till they call me master mine

      (pow pow)

      For a quarter and a dime

      (pow pow)

      You can get the dee-luxe shine

      (pow pow)

      Say you wanta pay a quarter?

      (pow pow)

      Then you give that to your daughter

      (pow pow)

      I ain't playing dozens, mister

      (pow pow) You can give it to your sister

      (pow pow)

      Any way you want to read it

      (pow pow)Maybe it's your momma need it

      (pow pow)

      Say I'm like a greedy bigot

      (pow pow)

      I'm a cap'talist, can you dig it?

      (pow pow)

      Faces

      Faces and more remember

      then reject

      the brown caramel days of youth.

      Reject the sun-sucked tit of

      childhood mornings.

      Poke a muzzle of war in the trust-frozen eyes of a favored doll.

      Breathe, Brother,

      and displace a moment's hate with organized love.

      A poet screams “CHRIST WAITS AT THE SUBWAY!”

      But who sees?

      To a Freedom Fighter

      You drink a bitter draught.

      I sip the tears your eyes fight to hold,

      A cup of lees, of henbane steeped in chaff.

      Your breast is hot,

      Your anger black and cold,

      Through evening's rest, you dream,

      I hear the moans, you die a thousands’ death.

      When cane straps flog the body

      dark and lean, you feel the blow.

      I hear it in your breath.

      Riot: 60's

      Our

      YOUR FRIEND CHARLIE pawnshop

      was a glorious blaze

      I heard the flames lick

      then eat the trays

      of zircons

      mounted in red gold alloys

      Easter clothes and stolen furs

      burned in the attic

      radios and teevees

      crackled with static

      plugged in

      only to a racial outlet

      Some

      thought the FRIENDLY FINANCE FURNITURE CO.

      burned higher

      When a leopard-print sofa with gold legs

      (which makes into a bed)

      caught fire

      an admiring groan from the waiting horde

      “Absentee landlord

      you got that shit”

      Lighting: a hundred Watts

      Detroit, Newark and New York

      Screeching nerves, exploding minds

      lives tied to a policeman's whistle

      a welfare worker's doorbell

      finger

      Hospitality, southern-style

      corn pone grits and you-all smile

      whole blocks novae

      brand-new stars

      policemen caught in their

      brand-new cars

      Chugga chugga chigga

      git me one nigga

      lootin’ n burnin’

      he won't git far

      Watermelons, summer ripe

      grey neckbones and boiling tripe


      supermarket roastin’ like the

      noonday sun

      national guard nervous with his shiny gun

      goose the motor quicker

      here's my nigga picka

      shoot him in the belly

      shoot him while he run

      We Saw Beyond Our Seeming

      We saw beyond our seeming

      These days of bloodied screaming

      Of children dying bloated

      Out where the lilies floated

      Of men all noosed and dangling

      Within the temples strangling

      Our guilt grey fungus growing

      We knew and lied our knowing

      Deafened and unwilling

      We aided in the killing

      And now our souls lie broken

      Dry tablets without token.

      Black Ode

      Your beauty is a thunder

      And I am set a wandering—a wandering

      Deafened

      Down twilight tin-can alleys

      And moist sounds

      “OOo wee, Baby, look what you could get if your name

      was Willie”

      Oh, to dip your words like snuff.

      A laughter, black and streaming

      And I am come a being—a being

      Rounded

      Up Baptist aisles, so moaning

      And moist sounds

      “Bless her heart. Take your bed and walk.

      You been heavy burdened”

      Oh, to lick your love like tears.

      No No No No

      No

      the two-legg'd beasts

      that walk like men

      play stink finger in their crusty asses

      while crackling babies

      in napalm coats

      stretch mouths to receive

      burning tears

      on splitting tongues

      JUST GIVE ME A COOL DRINK OF WATER ‘FORE I DIIIE

      No

      the gap-legg'd whore

      of the eastern shore

      enticing Europe to COME

      in her

      and turns her pigeon-shit back to me

      to me

      who stoked the coal that drove the ships

      which brought her over the sinuous cemetery

      of my many brothers

      No

      the cocktailed afternoons

      of what can I do.

      In my white layered pink world

      I've let your men cram my mouth

      with their black throbbing hate

      and I swallowed after I've let your mammies

      steal from my kitchens

      (I was always half-amused)

      I've chuckled the chins of

      your topsy-haired pickaninnies.

      What more can I do?

      I'll never be black like you.

      (HALLELUJAH)

      No

      the red-shoed priests riding

      palanquined

      in barefoot children country

      the plastered saints gazing down

      beneficently

      on kneeling mothers

      picking undigested beans

      from yesterday's shit.

      I have waited

      toes curled, hat rolled

      heart and genitals

      in hand

      on the back porches

      of forever

      in the kitchens and fields

      of rejections

      on the cold marble steps

      of America's White Out-House

      in the drop seats of buses

      and the open flies of war

      No more

      the dream that you

      will cease haunting me

      down in fetid swamps of fear and will turn to embrace your own

      humanity

      which I AM

      No more

      the hope that

      the razored insults

      which mercury-slide over your tongue

      will be forgotten

      and you will learn the words of love

      Mother Brother Father Sister Lover Friend

      My hopes

      dying slowly

      rose petals falling

      beneath an autumn red moon

      will not adorn your unmarked graves

      My dreams

      lying quietly

      a dark pool under the trees

      will not carry your name

      to a forgetful shore

      And what a pity

      What a pity

      that pity has folded in upon itself

      an old man's mouth

      whose teeth are gone

      and I have no pity.

      My Guilt

      My guilt is “slavery's chains,” too long

      the clang of iron falls down the years.

      This brother's sold, this sister's gone,

      is bitter wax, lining my ears.

      My guilt made music with the tears.

      My crime is “heroes, dead and gone,”

      dead Vesey, Turner, Gabriel,

      dead Malcolm, Marcus, Martin King.

      They fought too hard, they loved too well.

      My crime is I'm alive to tell.

      My sin is “hanging from a tree,”

      I do not scream, it makes me proud.

      I take to dying like a man.

      I do it to impress the crowd.

      My sin lies in not screaming loud.

      The Calling of Names

      He went to being called a colored man

      after answering to “hey, nigger.”

      Now that's a big jump,

      anyway you figger.

      Hey, Baby, watch my smoke.

      From colored man to Negro,

      With the N in caps,

      was like saying Japanese

      instead of saying Japs.

      I mean, during the war.

      The next big step

      was a change for true,

      From Negro in caps

      to being a Jew.

      Now, Sing, Yiddish Mama.

      Light, Yellow, Brown

      and Dark-brown skin,

      were okay colors to

      describe him then.

      He was a Bouquet of Roses.

      He changed his seasons

      like an almanac.

      Now you'll get hurt

      if you don't call him “Black.”

      Nigguh, I ain't playin’ this time.

      On Working White Liberals

      I don't ask the Foreign Legion

      Or anyone to win my freedom

      Or to fight my battle better than I can,

      Though there's one thing that I cry for

      I believe enough to die for

      That is every man's responsibility to man.

      I'm afraid they'll have to prove first

      That they'll watch the Black man move first

      Then follow him with faith to kingdom come.

      This rocky road is not paved for us,

      So, I'll believe in Liberals’ aid for us

      When I see a white man load a Black man's gun.

      Sepia Fashion Show

      Their hair, pomaded, faces jaded

      bones protruding, hip-wise,

      the models strutted, backed and butted,

      then stuck their mouths out, lip-wise.

      They'd nasty manners, held like banners,

      while they looked down their nose-wise.

      I'd see ‘em in hell, before they'd sell

      me one thing they're wearing, clothes-wise.

      The Black Bourgeois, who all say “yah”

      when yeah is what they're meaning,

      should look around, both up and down,

      before they set out preening.

      “Indeed,” they swear, “that's what I'll wear

      when I go country-clubbing.”

      I'd remind them please, look at those knees,

      you got at Miss Ann's scrubbing.

      The Thirteens (Black)

      Your Momma took to shouting,

      Your Poppa's gone to war,


      Your sister's in the streets,

      Your brother's in the bar,

      The thirteens. Right On.

      Your cousin's taking smack,

      Your uncle's in the joint,

      Your buddy's in the gutter,

      Shooting for his point,

      The thirteens. Right On.

      And you, you make me sorry,

      You out here by yourself,

      I'd call you something dirty,

      But there just ain't nothing left,

      ‘cept

      The thirteens. Right On.

      The Thirteens (White)

      Your Momma kissed the chauffeur,

      Your Poppa balled the cook,

      Your sister did the dirty,

      in the middle of the book,

      The thirteens. Right On.

      Your daughter wears a jock strap,

      Your son he wears a bra,

      Your brother jonesed your cousin

      in the back seat of the car.

      The thirteens. Right On.

      Your money thinks you're something,

      But if I'd learned to curse,

      I'd tell you what your name is,

      But there just ain't nothing worse

      than

      The thirteens. Right On.

      Harlem Hopscotch

      One foot down, then hop! It's hot.

      Good things for the ones that's got.

      Another jump, now to the left.

      Everybody for hisself.

      In the air, now both feet down.

      Since you black, don't stick around.

      Food is gone, the rent is due,

      Curse and cry and then jump two.

      All the people out of work,

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026