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
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.
THE THING ITSELF
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.
TORTURE
When they torture your mother
plant a tree
When they torture your father
plant a tree
When they torture your brother
and your sister
plant a tree
When they assassinate
your leaders
and lovers
plant a tree
When they torture you
too bad
to talk
plant a tree.
When they begin to torture
the trees
and cut down the forest
they have made
start another.
WELL.
Well.
He was a poet
a priest
a revolutionary
compañero
and we were right
to be seduced.
He brought us greetings
from his countrypeople
and informed us
with lifted
fist
that they would not
be moved.
All his poems
were eloquent.
I liked
especially
the one
that said
the revolution
must
liberate
the cougars, the trees,
and the lakes;
when he read it
everyone
breathed
relief;
ecology
lives
of all places
in Central
America!
we thought.
And then he read
a poem
about Grenada
and we
smiled
until he began
to describe
the women:
Well. One woman
when she smiled
had shiny black
lips
which reminded him
of black legs
(vaselined, no doubt),
her whole mouth
to the poet
revolutionary
suddenly
a leg
(and one said
What?)
Another one,
duly noted by
the priest,
apparently
barely attentive
at a political
rally
eating
a mango
Another wears
a red dress,
her breasts
(no kidding!)
like coconuts .…
Well. Nobody ever said
supporting other people’s revolutions
wouldn’t make us
ill:
But what a pity
that
the poet
the priest
and the revolution
never seem
to arrive
for the black woman,
herself.
Only for her black lips
or her black leg
does one or the other
arrive;
only for her
devouring mouth
always depicted
in the act
of eating
something colorful
only for her breasts
like coconuts
and her red dress.
SONG
The world is full of colored
people
People of Color
Tra-la-la
The world is full of
colored people
Tra-la-la-la-la.
They have black hair
and black and brown
eyes
The world is full of
colored people
Tra-la-la.
The world is full of colored
people
People of