Authors: Nikki Giovanni
(Who Died at the Hands of His Bandmates)
The ever restless ocean
Beating against sea
And sky
Grinds, no gently rubs,
The bones of Robert Champion
Into the salt
Of his ancestors
Driven into the blue
Through Middle Passage
We know the torture
Of slavery
And apartheid
We know the terror
Of Jim Crow
Who would imagine The Band
Would kill
Are we having too many
Black men trying to sing
A praise song
Too many Black men trying
To show a better self
So many Black men
That we can spare them
I don't think so
There can be no excuse
For this murder
There can be no I didn't
Realize he was dying
How could you not know
When you act like nazis
Jesus is crucified
How could you not understand
This child should have lived
How could Black men do this
to each other?
I killed a spider
Not a murderous brown recluse
Nor even a black widow
And if the truth were told this
Was only a small
Sort of papery spider
Who should have run
When I picked up the book
But she didn't
And she scared me
And I smashed her
I don't think
I'm allowed
To kill something
Because I am
Frightened
Or
War Is Never Right
For some reason
Or perhaps
None
The dew was just lifting
Which is not unreasonable
But something for no reason
Made me walk
In my house slippers
To the little dogwood tree
Recently planted
By the shed
As I watered the tree
And, frankly, took joy
In the grass coming up
Where I had tried
For several years to no avail
To grow this little spot of green
I spotted a furry thing
Without thinking
I turned the hose on it
Assuming it was a mushroom
Or some of the mold
That occasionally forms
On top of the mulch
I know there could not
Have been a scream because
Screams aren't possible
For little birds
But there was a protest
My heart broke
This little robin was out of the nest
Before she could fly
And I live with a Yorkie
Who was sniffing the yard
I grabbed the dog
Taking her back inside
And returned
To understand
This little bird would die
The mother was overhead now
And I put the bird in a basket
To take her beyond the reach
Of Alex though surely
Into the paw
Of one of the cats that roam
Some will say:
It's Mother Nature's
way
Some will say:
It's Natural
Some will say:
It is out of your hands
There is
Nothing
you can do about it
But it still breaks my heart
To know that little robin
Cannot be saved
TEREZIN: WHERE THIRTY-FIVE THOUSAND DIED BUT IT WAS NOT A DEATH CAMP
I don't want you
To watch me sleeping I don't want you
To look worriedly
Over me
In some hospital bed
Tied up with tubes
Laboring over my breath
Until I take that last one
And release my energy
There was a deer
In the middle of Highway 81
She had been hit
And could not run
While waiting for some uninterested trucker
She held up her head
And I
In cowardly concern
Turned away
There was
On a cold snowy night
Coming across the West Virginia Turnpike
A rabbit which tried to cross
Four lanes of traffic
The head was hit
But hadn't yet told the legs
So they kept running
And I from fatigue
And helplessness drove
On
Slavery was not fun
The holocaust happened
People are not good
And yet we go on
Until we stop
And I think
The only bravery available
To us
Is to Remember
Smellâ
As we all knowâ
Is half the taste
TO THE LION WHO DISCOVERED A DEER IN HIS HABITAT:
GIVE HIM KETCHUP!
Because who was knocking on my door
After midnight
I know it wasn't you
'Cause you said:
This is it. I am out of here. I don't want to hear it anymore
And I said:
Well go. You think I care?
Ergo I know it wasn't you
Needing my arms
Or my kisses
Not to mention my roast beef
So who was knocking at that hour
Last night night before
24 robbers at my door
I got up let them in
Hit them in the head
With a rolling pin
All hid?
And the lion pounced
Because it was such a treat
The chance to butcher his own meat
Not that the zoo butcher didn't cut a fine roast
But hell
He could for the first time in his life
Do it himself
Remember when you were learning to walk
And your mom would hold your hand
Remember when you started dressing yourself
And your big sister laughed at your stripes and plaids
Well that lion didn't have anyone to answer to now
But himself
Imagine his pride when he carted dinner home
That night
Imagine the good good love they would make
While she crooned what a lion he is
And then the zookeeper came and said:
Deer is not good for you
Yes, dear,
she said,
I am
Pass the ketchup, Mr. Zookeeper
You or the antelope?
Fresher Meat, Better Tasting
Papa John
Poetry is as necessary
To life
As salt is to stew
As garlic is to pasta
As perfume is to summer nights
As shaving lotion is to mornings
As your smile is to
My happiness
Poetry is as significant
To life
As yeast is to bread
As butter is to toast
As grapes are to wine
As sugar is to lemons
How else will we get
Lemonade
Poetry is to me
Your voice
Your touch
Your laughter
That feeling at the end of day
That I am
Not alone
The buzz of the flies
Almost was a lullaby
Rocking the dead
To a restful place
You couldn't hear the ants
Though they were
Clearly there
In the eyes the mouths
Any wound or soft
Tissue
The worms had come
Understanding those
Which were not
Trampled
Would have a great
Feast
The grasses had no
Choice but to drink
Down the blood
And bits of flesh
That were ground
Into them
In the future
It would be girls
Not field rats
Who would follow
The soldiers
Into the trenches
In the future there
Would be single
Engine airplanes
Dropping bombs
And then
In the scientific imagination
Of the 21st century
There would be men
And women
Pushing buttons
Making war clean
And distant
But today
On This battlefield
The deadliest of This war
The Songbirds had been
Frightened off
The Turkey Buzzards retreated to watch
Deer Skunk Raccoons
Possum Groundhogs gathered
To let the smoke clear
And only the moans
Of the almost dead
And the quiet march of Lice
Gave cadence to this concert of sacrifice
For
Freedom
they eat beans mostly, this old yellow pair
âFrom “The Bean Eaters” by Gwendolyn Brooks
At the Evening of Life
I wonder if
they
See the evening of life as a treat to
eat
Or as a staple like
beans
With corn bread
mostly
A good warming meal
this
Daily day
old
Bread pudding love capped sunshine
yellow
By an honest upstanding
pair
(Haiku for Ethel and Lucy)
Pinto Beans Fried Corn Bread
Clean Spring Water Rocking Chair
Your Smile Home Peace
In the name of those incredibly Brave men and women
who made the Trek from Freedom in Africa to Enslavement in America
and maintained their humanity
through unspeakable acts
In the precious name of Phillis Wheatley
who was put on Academic Trial
forcing her to prove she wrote her own Poems
to the confident Paul Laurence Dunbar
who kept the plantation tongue alive
In the Brave name of W. E. B. DuBois
who studied The Atlantic Slave Trade
to Jessie Fauset
who wrote children's stories
In the name of the incomparable Langston Hughes
who taught us
The tom-tom cries and
the tom-tom laughs
to the anger of Richard Wright
In the name of the Honesty of James Baldwin
In the fearlessness of Margaret Walker
to the beautiful poems of Gwendolyn Brooks
In the name of the awesome Toni Morrison
And the truly wonderful spirit of Rita Dove
In the names of those whom we silently call
and in the names of those whose names will call us
in the future
This is for
Sonia Sanchez
Words are the lifeblood of writers. Though I must admit I don't know if we dream in words or if we word our dreams.
Words are like quilts. You have to put a bunch together to make something warm and comforting or patch together something that will prick and scratch the spirit. No matter how we weave this experience, we sculpt an idea and shape a phrase.
A phrase. Usually we find phrases to describe whatever it is. No word is sufficient to stand alone. Not even strong words like FREEDOM or soft words like LOVE. They all are better when added to . . . for example FOR ALL . . . or
Je t'aime
. Love phrases work in all languages.
The human experiment has turned on many important phrases WE THE PEOPLE,
taxation without representation
and even things like REMEMBER THE MAINE. There are other political phrases like LIBERTÃ, ÃGALITÃ, FRATERNITÃ. I especially like WE SHALL OVERCOME. There are personal phrases like
Yes
. Which may be the only one-word phrase we ever use.
No
requires a bit more. There are personal phrases such as
You Look Beautiful
and
I am so proud of you
but maybe that's a sentence not a phrase.
The human imagination is the engine that has carried us from caves in Europe, from the rain forests of South America, from the lush and mineral-rich lands of Africa, from the beautiful amber waves of North America, from the roaring seas and the frozen tundra to this meeting with these artists here at Virginia Tech and, in fact, to wherever humans gather.
There are philosophical phrases, theological phrases, scientific phrases, economic phrases, political phrases, phrases to explain and express. BUT
there is one phrase that, if a phrase could be said to jump-start the human heart, we all know and love. Writers took up this phrase from the griots and soothsayers of old. As we began this journey with words, which is yet ever expanding our emotional and physical universe, we still find in our darkest hours and our most joyful moments the need to gather 'round the fire, or circle the wagons, or tuck into bed the young and the old with the enchantment of that magical phrase “Once Upon A Time . . . ” We know the storyteller has arrived. We comfort our spirits to think and dream. We know those other magical words will follow: In A Land Far Away . . . and our imaginations can soar safe within the hopes and sometimes the prayers.
OUR JOB SAFETY IS YOUR PRIORITY WITH COFFEE
I have written the essay below to help explain how I edit my poetry. I am more inclined to say I create a path through which I hope to take the reader rather than finding a perfect word to make the reader follow my thought. I have chosen a new poem:
COFFEE
because I actually did make a new pathway once I gave it a second or third look. I think the second version is an easier walk. I wrote to share my feelings about the edit.
Job   (Y)                                                                  Â
(Y)our Job Safety Is Our Priority: A Path for Poetry
(should read “our job safety is your priority”
but I cannot make my computer cross things out)
A poem is not so much read as navigated. We go from point to point discovering a new horizon, a shift of light or laughter, an exhilaration of newness that we had missed before. Even familiar, or perhaps especially familiar, poems bring the excitement of first nighters, first encounters, first love . . . when viewed and reviewed.
I'm not a big fan of adjust this line, change this word, add a
this
subtract a
that.
The poem like the kitten, like the tadpole, like the moth
is
and with time will mature to
become
. Sometimes it gets consumed to make another poem betterâsometimes it simply is out in the world too long and dries upâsometimes a friendly scout seeing the struggle of the butterfly to break free from the cocoon decides to make the struggle easier and cuts her loose . . . call it an MFA program workshopping a poem too much. She falls to the ground, unable to soar because a doer of good deeds didn't want to see the pain. Though now all that is left is a tenure-track position and the bitterness of tears shed for dreams not unwon but unchased.
I like to think poems are mapsâthey don't Google but rather guide us along the way. There is no destination on a country road. You see an old woman slightly bent moving through the field. A frisky calf frolicking. Sometimes a deer standing still. Why would there be a destination when life itself is a journey? You go not to get there but to be there.
On my good days I like to think a glass of
blanc de blanc
(as real champagne is for movie stars and presidents), a bit of sun through the clouds, my backyard birds singing, the koi contentedly lazing through the pool, and Alex, my little Yorkie friend, and I are a country road. We meander, we laugh, we would like to love. We are a journeyâa poem. Open us. Explore. Inhale. Wonder.
COFFEE (original)
Vitamin C prevents
Colds
A and D do sunshine
Things
We need calcium
For strong bones
There must be something
For the eyes
Carrots, Cabbage, Lettuce
You never saw
A blind rabbit
And I have a friend
Who thinks Salmon
Will prevent
A loss of your mind
But I believe
In Coffee
Drip
Percolated
Pressed
Coffee
Black not sweet
No cream
Coffee
Which smells like morning
And feels like friendship
Coffee
While we laugh
And preview
Our day
COFFEE (edited)
Vitamin C prevents
Colds
A and D do sunshine
Things
We need Calcium
For strong bones
And
There must be something
For the eyes
Carrots, Cabbage, Lettuce
You never saw
A blind rabbit
And I have a friend
Who thinks Salmon
Will prevent
A loss of your mind
But I believe
In Coffee
Drip
Percolated
Pressed
Coffee
Black not sweet
No cream
Coffee
Which smells like morning
And feels like friendship
Coffee
While we laugh
And preview
Our day