Read Jimmy's Blues and Other Poems Online
Authors: James Baldwin
what an interesting way
to be alone!
Time is not money:
time is time.
And a man is a man, my brother,
and a crime remains
a crime.
The time our fathers bought for us
resides in a place no man can reach
except he be prepared
to disintegrate himself into atoms,
into smashed fragments of bleaching bone,
which is, indeed, the great temptation
beckoning this disastrous nation.
It may, indeed, precisely, be
all that they claim as History.
Those who required, of us, a song,
know that their hour is not long.
Our children are
the morning star.
In a strange house,
a strange bed
in a strange town,
a very strange me
is waiting for you.
Now
it is very early in the morning.
The silence is loud.
The baby is walking about
with his foaming bottle,
making strange sounds
and deciding, after all,
to be my friend.
You
arrive tonight.
How dull time is!
How emptyâand yet,
since I am sitting here,
lying here,
walking up and down here,
waiting,
I see
that time's cruel ability
to make one wait
is time's reality.
I see your hair
which I call red.
I lie here in this bed.
Someone teased me once,
a friend of oursâ
saying that I saw your hair red
because I was not thinking
of the hair on your head.
Someone also told me,
a long time ago:
my father said to me,
It is a terrible thing
,
son
,
to fall into the hands of the living God
.
Now,
I know what he was saying.
I could not have seen red
before finding myself
in this strange, this waiting bed.
Nor had my naked eye suggested
that colour was created
by the light falling, now,
on me,
in this strange bed,
waiting
where no one has ever rested!
The streets, I observe,
are wintry.
It feels like snow.
Starlings circle in the sky,
conspiring,
together, and alone,
unspeakable journeys
into and out of the light.
I know
I will see you tonight.
And snow
may fall
enough to freeze our tongues
and scald our eyes.
We may never be found again!
Just as the birds above our heads
circling
are singing,
knowing
that, in what lies before them,
the always unknown passage,
wind, water, air,
the failing light
the falling night
the blinding sun
they must get the journey done.
Listen.
They have wings and voices
are making choices
are using what they have.
They are aware
that, on long journeys,
each bears the other,
whirring,
stirring
love occurring
in the middle of the terrifying air.
If the hope of giving
is to love the living,
the giver risks madness
in the act of giving.
Some such lesson I seemed to see
in the faces that surrounded me.
Needy and blind, unhopeful, unlifted,
what gift would give them the gift to be gifted?
The giver is no less adrift
than those who are clamouring for the gift.
If they cannot claim it, if it is not there,
if their empty fingers beat the empty air
and the giver goes down on his knees in prayer
knows that all of his giving has been for naught
and that nothing was ever what he thought
and turns in his guilty bed to stare
at the starving multitudes standing there
and rises from bed to curse at heaven,
he must yet understand that to whom much is given
much will be taken, and justly so:
I cannot tell how much I owe
.
Two black boots,
                  on the floor,
figuring out what the walking's for.
Two black boots,
                  now, together,
learning the price of the stormy weather.
To say nothing of the wear and tear
on
the mother-fucking
                              leather.
The darkest hour
is just before the dawn,
and that, I see,
which does not guarantee
power to draw the next breath,
nor abolish the suspicion
that the brightest hour
we will ever see
occurs just before we cease
to be.
Imagination
creates the situation,
and, then, the situation
creates imagination.
It may, of course,
be the other way around:
Columbus was discovered
by what he found.
Who knows more
of Wanda, the wan,
than I do?
And who knows more
of Terry, the torn,
than I do?
And who knows more
than I do
of Ziggy, the Zap,
fleeing the rap,
using his eyes and teeth
to spring the trap,
than I do!
     Or did.
Good Lord, forbid
that morning's acre,
held in the palm of the hand,
one's fingers helplessly returning
dust to dust,
the dust crying out,
triumphantly,
take her!
Oh, Lord,
can these bones live?
I think, Yes,
then I think, No:
being witness to a blow
delivered outside of time,
witness to a crime
which time
is, in no way whatever,
compelled to see,
not being burdened with sight:
like me.
Oh, I watch Wanda,
Wanda, the wan,
making love with her pots,
and her frying pan:
feeding her cats,
who, never, therefore,
dream of catching the rats
who bar
her not yet barred
and most unusual door.
The cats make her wan,
a cat
(no matter how you cut him)
not being a man,
or a woman, either.
And, yet,
at that,
better than nothing:
But
nothing is not better than nothing:
nothing is nothing,
just like
everything is everything
(and you better believe it).
      And,
Terry, the torn,
wishes he'd never been born
because he was found sucking a cock
in the shadow of a Central Park rock.
The cock was black,
like Terry,
and the killing, healing,
thrilling thing
was in nothing resembling a hurry:
came, just before the cops came,
and was long gone,
baby,
out of
that
park,
while the cops were writing down Terry's name.
       Well.
Birds do it.
Bees endlessly do it.
Cats leap jungles
cages and ages
to keep on doing it
and even survive
overheated apartments
and canned cat-food
doing it to each other
all day long.
It is one of the many forms of love,
and, even in the cat kingdom,
of survival:
but Wanda never looked
and Terry didn't think he was a cat
and he was right about that.
      Enter Ziggy, the Zap,
having taken the rap
for a friend,
fearing he was facing the end,
but very cool about it,
he thought,
selling
what others bought
(he thought).
      But Wanda had left the bazaar
tricked by a tricky star.
She knew nothing of distance,
less of light,
the star vanished
and down came night.
Wanda thought this progression natural.
Refusing to moan,
she began to drink
far too alone
to dare to think.
I watch her open door.
She thinks that she wishes
to be a whore.
But whoredom is hard work,
stinks far too much of the real,
is as ruthless as a turning wheel,
and who knows more
of this
than I do?
Oh,
and Ziggy, the Zap,
who took the rap,
raps on
to his fellow prisoners
in the cell he never left
and will never leave.
You'd best believe
it's cold outside.
Nobody
wants to go where
nothing is everything
and everything adds up
to nothing.
Better to slide
into the night
cling to the memory
of the shameful rock
which watched as the shameful act occurred
yet spoke no warning
said not a word.
And who knows more
of shame, and rocks
,
than I do?
Oh,
and Wanda, the wan,
will never forgive her sky.
That's why the old folks say
(and who knows better than I?)
we will understand it
better
by and by.
My Lord.
I understand it,
now:
the why is not the how.
My Lord,
Author of the whirlwind,
and the rainbow,
Co-author of death,
giver and taker of breath
(Yes, every knee must bow),
I understand it
now:
the why is not the how.
The lady is a tramp
a camp
a lamp
The lady is a sight
a might
a light
the lady devastated
an alley or two
reverberated through the valley
which leads to me, and you
the lady is the apple
of God's eye:
He's cool enough about it
but He tends to strut a little
when she passes by
the lady is a wonder
daughter of the thunder
smashing cages
legislating rages
with the voice of ages
singing us through.
1
Some days worry
some days glad
some days
more than make you
mad.
Some days,
some days, more than
shine:
when you see what's coming
on down the line!
2
Some days you say,
oh, not me neverâ!
Some days you say
bless God forever.
Some days, you say,
curse God, and die
and the day comes when you wrestle
with that lie.
Some days tussle
then some days groan
and some days
don't even leave a bone.
Some days you hassle
all alone.
3
I don't know, sister,
what I'm saying,
nor do no man,
if he don't be praying.
I know that love is the only answer
and the tight-rope lover
the only dancer.
When the lover come off the rope
today,
the net which holds him
is how we pray,
and not to God's unknown,
but to each otherâ:
the falling mortal is our brother!
4
Some days leave
some days grieve
some days you almost don't believe.
Some days believe you,
some days don't,
some days believe you
and you won't.
Some days worry
some days mad
some days more than make you
glad.
Some days, some days,
more than shine,
witnesses,
coming on down the line!
Between holding on,
and letting go,
I wonder
how you know
the difference.
It must be something like
the difference
between heaven and hell
but how, in advance,
can you tell?
If letting go
is saying no,
then what is holding on
saying?
Come.
Can anyone be held?
Can Iâ?
The impossible conundrum,
the closed circle,
why
does lightning strike this house
and not another?
Or, is it true
that love is blind
until challenged by the drawbridge
of the mind?
But, saying that,
one's forced to see one's definitions
as unreal.
We do not know enough about the mind,
  or how the conundrum of the imagination
dictates, discovers,
or can dismember what we feel,
  or what we find.
Perhaps
one must learn to trust
one's terror:
the holding on
the letting go
is error:
  the lightning has no choice,
    the whirlwind has one voice.
Saul,
how does it feel
to be Paul?
I mean, tell me about that night
you saw the light,
when the light knocked you down.
What's the cost
of being lost
and found?
It must be high.
And I've always thought you must have been,
stumbling homeward,
trying to find your way out of town
through all those baffling signals,
those one-way streets,