Read Horses Make a Landscape Look More Beautiful Online
Authors: Alice Walker
settle down and comb her hair.
The children crept up and stroked it,
and she felt beautiful.
Such wonderful people, Africans
Childish, arrogant, self-indulgent, pompous,
cowardly and treacherous—a
great
disappointment
to Israel, of course, and really rather
ridiculous in international affairs,
but, withal, opined Golda, a people of charm
and good taste.
If “those people” like you
it is a bad sign.
It is the kiss of death.
This is the kind of thing we discuss
among ourselves.
We were about to throw out
a perfectly good man.
“They are always telling me
I’ve got to meet him! They
are always saying how superior
he is! And those who cannot
say he’s superior say ‘How
Nice
.’
Well! We know what this means.
The man’s insufferable.
They’re
insufferable. How can he stand
them
, if he means any good to us?”
It so happened I knew this man.
“You’ve got to meet him,” I said.
“He
is
superior, nice, and not at all
insufferable.” And this is true.
But the talk continued:
If “those people” like you
it is a bad sign.
It is the kiss of death.
Because that is the kind of thing
we talk about
among ourselves.
I am so thankful I have seen
The Desert
And the creatures in The Desert
And the desert Itself.
The Desert has its own moon
Which I have seen
With my own eye
There is no flag on it.
Trees of the desert have arms
All of which are always up
That is because the moon is up
The sun is up
Also the sky
The stars
Clouds
None with flags.
If there were flags, I doubt
The trees would point.
Would you?
I’m really very fond of you,
he said.
I don’t like fond.
It sounds like something
you would tell a dog.
Give me love,
or nothing.
Throw your fond in a pond,
I said.
But what I felt for him
was also warm, frisky,
moist-mouthed,
eager,
and could swim away
if forced to do so.
There are five people in this room
who still don’t know what I’m saying.
“What is she saying?” they’re asking.
“What is she doing here?”
It is not enough to be interminable;
one must also be precise.
The Wasichus
*
did not kill them to eat; they
killed them for the metal that makes them crazy,
and they took only the hides to sell. Sometimes
they did not even take the hides, only the
tongues; and I have heard that fire-boats came
down the Missouri River loaded with dried bison
tongues.… And when there was nothing left
but heaps of bones, the Wasichus came and
gathered up even the bones and sold them.
—Black Elk,
Black Elk Speaks
*
Wasichu in Sioux means “he who takes the fat.”
Sometimes I feel so bad
I ask myself
Who in the world
Have I murdered?
It is a Wasichu’s voice
That asks this question,
Coming from nearly inside of me.
It is asking to be let in, of course.
I am here too! he shouts,
Shaking his fist.
Pay some attention to me!
But if I let him in
What a mess he’ll make!
Even now asking who
He’s murdered!
Next he’ll complain
Because we don’t keep a maid!
He is murderous and lazy
And I fear him,
This small, white man;
Who would be neither courteous
Nor clean
Without my help.
By the hour I linger
On his deficiencies
And his unfortunate disposition,
Keeping him sulking
And kicking
At the door.
There is the mind that creates
Without loving, for instance,
The childish greed;
The boatloads and boatloads
of tongues …
Besides, where would he fit
If I did let him in?
No sitting at round tables
For him!
I could be a liberal
And admit one of his children;
Or be a radical and permit two.
But it is
he
asking
To be let in, alas.
Our mothers learned to receive him occasionally,
Passing as Christ. But this did not help us much.
Or perhaps it made all the difference.
But there. He is bewildered
And tuckered out with the waiting.
He’s giving up and going away.
Until the next time.
And murdered quite sufficiently, too, I think,
Until the next time.
We must say it all, and as clearly
as we can. For, even before we are dead,
they are busy
trying to bury us.
Were we black? Were we women? Were we gay?
Were we the wrong
shade
of black? Were we yellow?
Did we, God forbid, love the wrong person, country
or politics? Were we Agnes Smedley or John Brown?
But, most of all, did we write exactly what we saw,
as clearly as we could? Were we unsophisticated
enough to cry
and
scream?
Well, then, they will fill our eyes,
our ears, our noses and our mouths
with the mud
of oblivion. They will chew up
our fingers in the night. They will pick
their teeth with our pens. They will sabotage
both our children
and our art.
Because when we show what we see,
they will discern the inevitable:
We do not worship them.
We do not worship them.
We do not worship what they have made.
We do not trust them.
We do not believe what they say.
We do not love their efficiency.
Or their power plants.
We do not love their factories.
Or their smog.
We do not love their television programs.
Or their radioactive leaks.
We find their papers boring.
We do not worship their cars.
We do not worship their blondes.
We do not envy their penises.
We do not think much
of their Renaissance.
We are indifferent to England.
We have grave doubts about their brains.
In short, we who write, paint, sculpt, dance
or sing
share the intelligence and thus the fate
of all our people
in this land.
We are not different from them,
neither above nor below,
outside nor inside.
We are the same.
And we do not worship them.
We do not worship them.
We do not worship their movies.
We do not worship their songs.
We do not think their newscasts
cast the news.
We do not admire their president.
We know why the White House is white.
We do not find their children irresistible;
We do not agree they should inherit the earth.
But lately you have begun to help them
bury us. You who said: King was just a womanizer;
Malcom, just a thug; Sojourner, folksy; Hansberry,
a traitor (or whore, depending); Fannie Lou Hamer,
merely spunky; Zora Hurston, Nella Larsen, Toomer:
reactionary, brainwashed, spoiled by whitefolks, minor;
Agnes Smedley, a spy.
I look into your eyes;
you are throwing in the dirt.
You, standing in the grave
with me. Stop it!
Each one must pull one.
Look, I, temporarily on the rim
of the grave,
have grasped my mother’s hand
my father’s leg.
There is the hand of Robeson
Langston’s thigh
Zora’s arm and hair
your grandfather’s lifted chin
the lynched woman’s elbow
what you’ve tried to forget
of your grandmother’s frown.
Each one, pull one back into the sun
We who have stood over
so many graves
know that no matter what
they
do
all of us must live
or none.
Who has not been
invaded
by the Wasichu?
Not I, said the people.
Not I, said the trees.
Not I, said the waters.
Not I, said the rocks.
Not I, said the air.
Moon!
We hoped
you were safe.
Listen,
stop tanning yourself
and talking about
fishbelly
white.
The color white
is not bad at all.
There are white mornings
that bring us days.
Or, if you must,
tan only because
it makes you happy
to be brown,
to be able to see
for a summer
the whole world’s
darker
face
reflected
in your own.
*
Stop unfolding
your eyes.
Your eyes are
beautiful.
Sometimes
seeing you in the street
the fold zany
and unexpected
I want to kiss
them
and usually
it is only
old
gorgeous
black people’s eyes
I want
to kiss.
**
Stop trimming
your nose.
When you
diminish
your nose
your songs
become little
tinny, muted
and snub.
Better you should
have a nose
impertinent
as a flower,
sensitive
as a root;
wise, elegant,
serious and deep.
A nose that
sniffs
the essence
of Earth. And knows
the message
of every
leaf.
***
Stop bleaching
your skin
and talking
about
so much black
is not beautiful
The color black
is not bad
at all.
There are black nights
that rock
us
in dreams.
Or, if you must,
bleach only
because it pleases you
to be brown,
to be able to see
for as long
as you can bear it
the whole world’s
lighter face
reflected
in your own.
****
As for me,
I have learned
to worship
the sun
again.
To affirm
the adventures
of hair.
For we are all
splendid
descendants
of Wilderness,
Eden:
needing only
to see
each other
without
commercials
to believe.
Copied skillfully
as Adam.
Original
as Eve.
No one can watch
the Wasichu
anymore
He is always
penetrating
a people
whose country
is too small
for him
His bazooka
always
sticking up
from some
howling
mother’s
backyard.
No one can watch
the Wasichu
anymore
He is always
squashing
something
Somebody’s guts
trailing
his shoe.
No one can watch
the Wasichu
anymore
He is scalping
the earth
till she runs
into the ocean
The dust of her
flight
searing
our sight.
No one can watch
the Wasichu
anymore
Smirking
into our bedrooms
with his
terrible
Nightly News …
No one can watch
the Wasichu
anymore.
Regardless.
He has filled
our every face
with his window.
Our every window
with
his face.
Now I am going
to rape you,
you joked;
after a pleasure
wrung
from me.
With playful roughness
you dragged my body
to meet yours;
on your face
the look of
mock
lust
you think
all real women
like
As all “real” women
really
like rape.
Lying
barely breathing
beneath
your heaving
heaviness
I fancied I saw
my great-great-grandmother’s
small hands
encircle
your pale neck.
There was no
pornography
in her world
from which to learn
to relish the pain.
(She was the thing
itself.)
Oh, you who seemed
the best of them,
my own sad
Wasichu;
in what gibberish
was our freedom
engraved on
our chains.
When they torture your mother
plant a tree
When they torture your father
plant a tree
When they torture your brother