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    The Complete Collected Poems of Maya Angelou

    Page 4
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    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.”


      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

     


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