Book Read Free

The Tradition

Page 3

by Jericho Brown


  Take a bullet. Break through

  Concrete. The sidewalk.

  The street someone crosses

  When he sees wilderness where

  He wanted his city. His cross-

  Tie. His telephone pole.

  Timber. Timbre. It’s an awful

  Sound, and people pay to hear

  It. People say bad things about

  Me, though they don’t know

  My name. I have a name.

  A stake. I settle. Dig. Die.

  Go underground. Tunnel

  The ocean floor. Root. Shoot

  Up like a thought someone

  Planted. Someone planted

  An idea of me. A lie. A lawn

  Jockey. The myth of a wooded

  Hamlet in America, a thicket,

  Hell, a patch of sunlit grass

  Where any one of us bursts into

  One someone as whole as we.

  Layover

  Dallas is so

  Far away

  Even for the people

  Who live

  In Dallas a hub

  Through which we get

  To smaller places

  That lurch

  And hurt going

  Home means stopping

  In Dallas and all are

  From little

  Towns and farms

  If all keep

  Heading back

  Far enough pay

  Attention keep

  Your belongings

  Near everyone

  In Dallas is

  Still driving

  At 3:24 a.m.

  Off I-20 where

  I was raped

  Though no one

  Would call it

  That he was

  Hovering by

  The time

  I understood

  He thought it necessary

  To leave me with knowledge

  I can be

  Hated I was

  Smaller then

  One road went

  Through me

  No airport

  I drove

  Him home

  A wreck

  On the freeway

  We sat

  In traffic

  My wallet

  On the seat

  In between

  My legs

  III

  Duplex

  I begin with love, hoping to end there.

  I don’t want to leave a messy corpse.

  I don’t want to leave a messy corpse

  Full of medicines that turn in the sun.

  Some of my medicines turn in the sun.

  Some of us don’t need hell to be good.

  Those who need most, need hell to be good.

  What are the symptoms of your sickness?

  Here is one symptom of my sickness:

  Men who love me are men who miss me.

  Men who leave me are men who miss me

  In the dream where I am an island.

  In the dream where I am an island,

  I grow green with hope. I’d like to end there.

  Of My Fury

  I love a man I know could die

  And not by way of illness

  And not by his own hand

  But because of the color of that hand and all

  His flawless skin. One joy in it is

  Understanding he can hurt me

  But won’t. I thought by now I’d be unhappy

  Unconscious next to the same lover

  So many nights in a row. He readies

  For bed right on the other side

  Of my fury, but first, I make a braid of us.

  I don’t sleep until I get what I want.

  After Essex Hemphill

  The night is the night. So

  Say the stars that light us

  As we kneel illegal and

  Illegal like Malcolm X.

  This is his park, this part

  Of the capital where we

  Say please with our mouths

  Full of each other, no one

  Hungry as me against this

  Tree. This tree, if we push

  Too hard, will fall. But if

  I don’t push at all, call me

  A sissy. Somebody ahead

  Of me seeded the fruit-

  Bearing forest. The night

  Is my right. Shouldn’t I

  Eat? Shouldn’t I repeat,

  It was good, like God?

  Stay

  It was restful, learning nothing necessary.

  Gwendolyn Brooks

  All day, I kept still just to think of it—

  Your body above mine, what was

  A lack of air between us—hot but restful

  As I sat center on my bed of learning,

  Mouth open, touching nothing,

  My memory the only noise necessary.

  A.D.

  Each wounds you badly, but no boy hurts

  Like the first one

     When you slept in a bed

  Too narrow for two. You thought he disappeared

    In the sheet and cushion,

  But look at you now, twenty-eight in a king, you wake

  With a man on your mind— Head

  On your chest, both of you bent

  As best you can to make

  Room for the other.

  Ten years, your feet hanging, tangled and long, and still

  You’re the victim

  Of such nightmares. You breathe

  Like he’s been lying

     On top for the last decade.

  A man goes to heaven, you suffocate below the weight.

  Turn You Over

  All my anxiety is separation anxiety.

  I want to believe you are here with me,

  But the bed is bigger and the trash

  Overflows. Someone righteous should

  Take out my garbage. I am so many odd

  And enviable things. Righteous is not

  One of them. I’d rather a man to avoid

  Than a man to imagine in a realm

  Unseen, though even the doctor who

  Shut your eyes swears you’re somewhere

  As close as breath. Mine, not yours.

  You don’t have breath. You got

  Heaven. That’s supposed to be my

  Haven. I want you to tell me it sparkles

  There. I want you to tell me anything

  Again and again while I turn you over

  To quiet you or to wake and remind you

  I can’t be expected to clean up after a man.

  The Virus

  Dubbed undetectable, I can’t kill

  The people you touch, and I can’t

  Blur your view

  Of the pansies you’ve planted

  Outside the window, meaning

  I can’t kill the pansies, but I want to.

  I want them dying, and I want

  To do the killing. I want you

  To heed that I’m still here

  Just beneath your skin and in

  Each organ

  The way anger dwells in a man

  Who studies the history of his nation.

  If I can’t leave you

  Dead, I’ll have

  You vexed. Look. Look

  Again: show me the color

  Of your flowers now.

  The Rabbits

  I caught them

  In couples on the lawn

  As I pulled into my driveway

  After a night of bare music,

  Of drinking on my feet

  Because I think I look better

  Standing. I should lie. Say

  They expressed my desire

  To mount and be

  Mounted as they scurried

  Into the darkest parts of what

  I pay for, but I am tired

  Of claiming beauty where

  There is only truth: the rabbits

  Heard me coming an
d said

  Danger in whatever tongue

  Stops them from making

  More. I should say

  I understood myself

  That way, as danger, engine

  Idling, but I thought

  Infestation. Now I worry

  No one will ever love me—

  Furry little delights fucking

  In my own front yard and I,

  I am reminded of all I’ve gotten

  Rid of. And every living

  Thing that still must go.

  Monotheism

  Some people need religion. Me?

  I’ve got my long black hair. I twist

  The roots and braid it tight. You’re

  My villain. You’re a hard father, from

  Behind, it whines, tied and tucked,

  Untouchable. Then comes

  The night— Before I carry my

  Mane to bed with me, I sit us

  In front of the vanity. Undo. Un-

  wind. Finally your fingers, it says

  Near my ear, Your fingers. Your

  Whole hands. No one’s but yours.

  Token

  Burg, boro, ville, and wood,

  I hate those tiny towns,

  Their obligations. If I needed

  Anyone to look at me, I’d dye my hair purple

  And live in Bemidji. Look at me. I want to dye

  My hair purple and never notice

  You notice. I want the scandal

  In my bedroom but not in the mouths of convenience

  Store customers off the nearest highway. Let me be

  Another invisible,

  Used and forgotten and left

  To whatever narrow miseries I make for myself

  Without anybody asking

  What’s wrong. Concern for my soul offends me, so

  I live in the city, the very shape of it

  Winding like the mazes of the adult-video outlets

  I roamed in my twenties: pay a token to walk through

  Tunnels of men, quick and colorless there where we

  Each knew what we were,

  There where I wasn’t the only one.

  The Hammers

  They sat on the dresser like anything

  I put in my pocket before leaving

  The house. I even saw a few little ones

  Tilted against the window of my living

  Room, metal threats with splinters

  For handles. They leaned like those

  Teenage boys at the corner who might

  Not be teenage boys because they ask

  For dollars in the middle of the early

  April day and because they knock

  At 10 a.m. Do I need help lifting some-

  Thing heavy? Yard work? The boys

  Seemed not to care that they lay

  On the floor lit by the TV. I’d have

  Covered them up with linen, with dry

  Towels and old coats, but their claw

  And sledge and ball-peen heads shone

  In the dark, which is, at least, a view

  In the dark. And their handles meant

  My hands, striking surfaces, getting

  Shelves up, finally. One hung

  From the narrow end of a spoke

  In the ceiling fan, in wait of summer.

  I found another propped near the bulb

  In the refrigerator. Wasn’t I hungry?

  Why have them there if I could not

  Use them, if I could not look at my own

  Reflection in the mirror and take one

  To the temple and knock myself out?

  I Know What I Love

  It comes from the earth.

  It is green with deceit.

  Sometimes what I love

  Shows up at three

  In the morning and

  Rushes in to turn me

  Upside down. Some-

  Times what I love just

  Doesn’t show up at all.

  It can hurt me if it

  Means to… because

  That’s what in love

  Means. What I love

  Understands itself

  As properly scarce.

  It knows I can’t need

  What I don’t go without.

  Some nights I hold

  My breath. I turn as in

  Go bad. When I die

  A man or a woman will

  Clean up the mess

  A body makes. They’ll

  Talk about gas prices

  And the current drought

  As they prepare the blue-

  Black cadaver that still,

  As the dead do, groans:

  I wanted what anyone

  With an ear wants—

  To be touched and

  Touched by a presence

  That has no hands.

  Crossing

  The water is one thing, and one thing for miles.

  The water is one thing, making this bridge

  Built over the water another. Walk it

  Early, walk it back when the day goes dim, everyone

  Rising just to find a way toward rest again.

  We work, start on one side of the day

  Like a planet’s only sun, our eyes straight

  Until the flame sinks. The flame sinks. Thank God

  I’m different. I’ve figured and counted. I’m not crossing

  To cross back. I’m set

  On something vast. It reaches

  Long as the sea. I’m more than a conqueror, bigger

  Than bravery. I don’t march. I’m the one who leaps.

  Deliverance

  Though I have not shined shoes for it,

  Have not suffocated myself handsome

  In a tight, bright tie, Sunday comes

  To me again as it did in childhood.

  We few left who listen to the radio leave

  Ourselves available to surprise. We pray

  Unaware of prayer. We are an ugly people.

  Forgive me, I do not wish to sing

  Like Tramaine Hawkins, but Lord if I could

  Become the note she belts halfway into

  The fifth minute of “The Potter’s House”

  When black vocabulary heralds home-

  Made belief: For any kind of havoc, there is

  Deliverance! She means that even after I am

  Not listening. I am not a saint

  Because I keep trying to be a sound, something

  You will remember

  Once you’ve lived enough not to believe in heaven.

  Meditations at the New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park

  1

  Dear Tom Dent,

  We still love you

  And love what

  It means to be

  A black college

  President’s son

  Whose pride

  And rebellion

  Look like men

  In the Seventh Ward.

  They groaned

  For you, and

  Ain’t that music

  Too, bodies

  Of several

  Shades arranged

  For one sound

  Of want or

  Without or wish

  A Negro would— Come

  Back home,

  Little light

  Skin, come

  Give Daddy

  A kiss.

  2

  I present myself that you might

  Understand how you got here

  And who you owe. As long as

  I can remember the brass band, it

  Lives, every goodbye a lie. Every

  One of them carries the weight

  He chose. And plays it. No theft.

  No rape. No flood. No. Not in

  This moment. Not in this lovely

  Sunlit room of my mind. Holy.

  So the Bible says, in the beginning,

  Blackness. I am alive. You?

  Alive. You bor
n with the nerve

  To arrive yawning. You who

  Walk without noticing your feet

  On an early morning swept hard-

  Wood floor: because Eve, because

  Lucy. The whole toe of my boot,

  Tapping.

  3

  This chair

  Is where

  I understand

  I am

  Nothing if

  I can’t

  Sit awhile

  In the audience

  Or alone, sit

  Down awhile

  And thank God

  The seat

  Has stayed

  Warm.

  Dark

  I am sick of your sadness,

  Jericho Brown, your blackness,

  Your books. Sick of you

  Laying me down

  So I forget how sick

  I am. I’m sick of your good looks,

  Your debates, your concern, your

  Determination to keep your butt

  Plump, the little money you earn.

  I’m sick of you saying no when yes is as easy

  As a young man, bored with you

  Saying yes to every request

  Though you’re as tired as anyone else yet

  Consumed with a single

  Diagnosis of health. I’m sick

  Of your hurting. I see that

  You’re blue. You may be ugly,

  But that ain’t new.

  Everyone you know is

  Just as cracked. Everyone you love is

  As dark, or at least as black.

  Duplex

  Don’t accuse me of sleeping with your man

  When I didn’t know you had a man.

  Back when I didn’t know you had a man,

  The moon glowed above the city’s blackout.

  I walked home by moonlight through the blackout.

  I was too young to be reasonable.

  He was so young, so unreasonable,

  He dipped weed in embalming fluid.

  He’d dip our weed in embalming fluid.

  We’d make love on trains and in dressing rooms.

  Love in the subway, love in mall restrooms.

  A bore at home, he transformed in the city.

  What’s yours at home is a wolf in my city.

  You can’t accuse me of sleeping with a man.

  Thighs and Ass

  Where I am my thickest, I grew

  Myself by squat and lunge, and all

  The time I sweated, I did not think

  Of being divided or entered, though

  Yes, I knew meat would lure men,

  And flesh properly placed will lead

  One to think that he can—when

  He runs from what sniffs to kill us—

  Mount my back trusting I may carry

 

‹ Prev