Authors: Frank X Walker
Myrlie Evers
Medgar, Charles, and men like them
survived Jim Crow Army,
the Blitzkrieg, and Messerschmitts.
They returned home and fought
for a Double Victory
against the axis powers
of poll taxes, literacy tests, and violence.
The battle now was to have some say
in their own lives.
I once was blind, but thank God I
can see
It was because grace and mercy
came along and rescued me
.
â
MISSISSIPPI MASS CHOIR
Â
Myrlie Evers
Whenever we needed more confidence
than we woke up with in the morning
God would come in a song
wearing a black woman's voice
a voice that sounded like that far away
look in Reverend Martin Luther King's eyes.
When she opened it up, it wrapped its arms
around all our fears, our doubts;
it lifted our hearts and spirits and took up
so much space there was no room to hate back.
Every time she laid down a verse over the roar
of fire hoses, attack dogs, and police batons,
our own voices would join hands, pick it up
and let the chorus carry us as far as we needed to go.
white men would say they were
going out to the quarters to
have their luck changed
.
â
ANONYMOUS
Â
Willie De La Beckwith
When our grandfathers strutted back
from the slave quarters
still unzipped and whiskey-eyed
and on occasion forgetting
it was a sweet southern belle
they were now wringing
when the mongrel evidence of their sins
crowded the edge of the front porch
or tiptoed around our kitchens
with swollen belliesâthus began
our great tradition
of not knowing and not wanting to know
of never ever asking about
what happened
out there     in the dark
but, if you really know a man
you know what he loves
and you know what ignites his lust
whether that be the peal and chime
of a black woman's body
or the silent one of her man.
⦠racism is a mental illness
brought on by the fear of white
genetic annihilation.”
â
DR. FRANCIS CRESS WELSING
Â
Byron De La Beckwith
We do what we do to build a fort around our women
and to protect America from mongrelization.
Allowing the free mixing of colored and white
is worse than too much pepper on a bowl of grits.
Have you not seen what one drop of black
paint will do to a gallon of white?
I ain't afraid of niggers, but I have nightmares
about the end of whiteness
and waking up one morning, pulling back the sheet
only to find my Willie is Aunt Jemima.
Willie De La Beckwith
There was a scary ol' black woman ghost
that carried a shotgun and snuck into the quarters
at night to steal little picaninnies an' field hands.
She carried each one of 'em down to the creek
and covered 'em with mud to hide their scent,
then sang a magic song that made 'em all invisible.
They ran away so quickly even the bloodhounds
couldn't catch 'em. She came back night after night
until she'd stole nearly every nigger in the quarters
and come spring there was hardly anybody to break
the ground and drop the seeds. In the summer
there was almost nobody to chop the cotton
when harvest time come, the poor old farmer and his wife
picked what they'd planted by themselves, worked
every day 'til sundown and even took supper in the fields.
They were both found on Christmas day, bent over
and frozen to a cotton bush, fingers and hands cut up
and still bleeding, after working themselves to death.
The registration of Negro voters
and demonstrations for civil rights
is strictly prohibited.
Violators will be punished
with racial epithets, harassing
phone calls, rocks, and eggs
(thrown from cars and trucks)
and firebombs when necessary.
Repeat offenders run the risk
of being immediately separated
from places of employment
and having mortgages called in.
Organizers of said activities
will be dealt with harshly
outside the highest limits of the law.
Myrlie Evers
When they unearthed
each new corpse,
we couldn't speak for days.
We came back
from that dark place
in tearsânot for ourselves,
but for all the mutilated
and charred remains that were not
Goodman, Schwerner, or Chaney.
We could only find solace
looking out over the Mississippi,
watching that dark woman
swallow the sun.
Up north, nobody thought
it necessary to teach
Dixie decorum
Did he whistle or
flirt, forget the Negro's place?
Was it eyeball rape?
The all-white jury
guzzled beer, while his mamma
shed tears on the stand
They looked at his skull
his disfigured face, smiled, and
still voted not guilty
Fourteen is too soon
to visit Mississippi
come home    in a box
Myrlie Evers
Three months before Emmett Till arrived
Reverend George Lee was killed
by a shotgun blast to the face.
It was ruled a traffic accident.
He had been the first to register
to vote in his county.
One week before Emmett Till arrived
Lamar Smith voted in the democratic primary
and was shot at high noon
in front of the county courthouse.
There were no arrests.
Medgar cried when he heard about young Till.
Then he dressed as a sharecropper
helped find witnesses
and smuggled them out of town
for their safety.
When Uncle Mose stood up in court,
pointed right at J. W. Milam, identified him
as the killer, we thought the air would split,
but it didn't.
Instead a seam opened up in that place
where we kept all our fears.
Myrlie Evers
It attached itself to our lives, first
like an unplanned pregnancy,
then like our fourth child.
We didn't talk about its disfigured face
or its crooked limbs and spine.
We went about the people's business
tried to pretend that it wasn't really there,
though some nights it filled every open space
in the room, often crawling into bed between us,
making it difficult to sleep.
Every new registered voter, successful boycott,
demonstration and prime-time television minute
put fat on its face. Images of Medgar
escorting James Meredith into Ole Miss
were celebrated with new front teeth.
When it crawled to the front door, and spoke
its first cuss words
it sounded like a car backfired twice.
I unzip my pants to piss,
and my fingers pull out a long black snake.
Willie reaches over, strokes it,
and smiles. I squeeze my eyes shut,
clear my head, enjoy the weight of it
in my hands, open my right eye to a squint,
line up the crosshairs,
take a deep breath              and smile back.
Killing that nigger gave me no
more inner discomfort than
our wives endure when they
give birth to our children
.
â
BYRON DE LA BECKWITH
Â
Like them, a man can conceive
an idea, an event, a moment so clearly
he can name it even before it breathes.
We both can carry a thing around inside
for only so long and no matter how small
it starts out, it can swell and get so heavy
our backs hurt and we can't find comfort
enough to sleep at night. All we can think
about is the relief that waits, at the end.
When it was finally time, it was painless.
It was the most natural thing I'd ever done.
I just closed my eyes and squeezed
then opened them and there he was,
just laying there still covered with blood,
(laughs) but already trying to crawl.
I must admit, like any proud parent
I was afraid at first, afraid he'd live,
afraid he'd die too soon.
Funny how life 'n death
is a whole lot of pushing and pulling,
holding and seeking breath;
a whole world turned upside down
until   some   body   screams.
Myrlie Evers speaks to Willie
and Thelma De La Beckwith
My faith urges me to love you.
My stomach begs me to not.
All I know is that day
made us sisters, somehow. After long
nervous nights and trials on end
we are bound together
in this unholy sorority of misery.
I think about you every time I run
my hands across the echoes
in the hollows of my sheets.
They seem loudest just before I wake.
I open my eyes every morning
half expecting Medgar to be there,
then I think about you
and your eyes always snatch me back.
Your eyes won't let me forget.
We are sorority sisters now
with a gut-wrenching country ballad
for a sweetheart song, tired funeral
and courtroom clothes for colors
and secrets we will take to our graves.
I was forced to sleep night after night
after night with a ghost.
You chose to sleep with a killer.
We all pledged our love,
crossed our hearts and swallowed oaths
before being initiated with a bullet.
Both of them were history, even before one
pulled the trigger, before I rocketed through
the smoking barrel hidden in the honeysuckle
before I tore through a man's back, shattered
his family, a window, and tore through an inner wall
before I bounced off a refrigerator and a coffeepot
before I landed at my destined point in history
ânext to a watermelon. What was cruel was the irony
not the melon, not the man falling in slow motion,
but the man squinting through the crosshairs
reducing the justice system to a small circle, praying
that he not miss, then sending me to deliver a message
as if the woman screaming in the dark
or the children crying at her feet
could ever believe
a bullet   was small enough   to hate.
Myrlie Evers
During the flag ceremony
soldiers folded, creased, tucked,
smoothed, and then folded again
with such precision and care,
I imagined they were wrapping
a body
a red, white, and blue
mummy
which they passed, and saluted
and honored so much so
everybody stopped looking
at the casket
by the time they placed that triangle
of husband in my arms,
they left no doubt
I was holding his future
and what we were burying
was only his past.
Byron De La Beckwith
What good would it do to own a whole orchard
and not make preserves out of the fruit?
Any fool with money and a passion for guns
is at most, a collector. Only a marksman like me
could truly own a rifle like that or any gun.
Owning a gun is like driving a fast car.
Hell, it's like raising prize cocks. You gotta keep
'em healthy and mean. You gotta let 'em out
of they cage sometimes and rev the engines
just to see 'em strut. Now, I ain't saying I did it,
that's for the state to prove, but you gotta be a fool
to own a car and not know how fast it'll go.
And whatever I am, I ain't no fool.
Thelma De La Beckwith speaks to Myrlie Evers
You are wrong to think my man a monster
or a lowly coward 'cause he grins at you
from across the courtroom. Your shallow
Faith won't let you see his generosity
or his compassion. Don't you see the courtesy
he extended to you by opening up a hole
in that boy's black back and not his face,
allowing you and your children the dignity
of an open casket, a vision of perfect sleep
instead of a bloody stump, where his head rests now?
Byron De La Beckwith
I have no problem with colored who know
their place, but it's easy to hate troublemakers
an' integrationists, uppity monkeys in suits'n ties,
little more than pet dogs for northern scum
pissing on our proud Heritage. Yeah, I shot that boy
in the back. But not 'cause I hated his color.
I hated how clean he kept his car. I hated
his always-pressed clothes and shiny shoes. I hated
that he parked in front of his own house. I hated