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Three Poems By Kwame Dawes

May 1, 2014

Border

 

They warned me when we stopped

on a barren street, trees thick

on each side of the narrow uneven

 

tarmac, the hills from which we

had descended a comfort behind

us; they warned me when I said

 

I heard something other than

the chattering of birds in the trees,

something like the hint of music

 

but with a strange pulse as if

the musician had forgotten

himself; they warned me that

 

that was the border, that I should

never go near the border,

that at the border the floorboards

 

are marinated to a supple bounce

by blood and sweat; that the

conductors in their black suits

 

and boxy neat caps are often

pregnant, the way most men

are not, and they play with

 

white familiar dogs as if

they are gods, while all around

people dance and cavort

 

and laugh like we know people

do in those way stations

before hell; so I stood

 

still, and tried to let the light

and the blue wrinkles of sound

from a river nearby sweep

 

away the giddy circles of

music from the border, but

even after we drove into

 

the reassurance of mountains

the sound followed me

then settled on me as dreams do.

 

An Unfinished Life

 

He said he had heard that the cold up North

kept a body fresh like ice days in South Carolina’s

winter will keep butchered flesh fresh for weeks.

He heard say that up there in Pittsburgh a black

man’s innards could last much longer, first

the cold and then a dose of brown liquor to pickle

the softer parts, make them last. Garret Brown

got that clean black as cool look that only

Gullah folk from Summerville got; the kind

you see in a white shirt, skinny boy with a

round as a penny face running errands here

and there, that was a boy turning into a man;

slavery still carrying its old stench in the air.

1873, they started walking ’cause everybody

told his mother that Charleston is an auction

block. “Charleston is too hot for negroes,

Charleston will break a black man with

fear.” This is why Garrett Brown started

walking—first to Louisville, Kentucky,

then as a man with a head full of

dreams, over the hills and valleys,

across the rivers and streams, into

the metal sky of Pittsburgh where the green

is cool as the air, and everything

lasts forever. Well, Mr. Garrett Brown

is dead, his lungs rotted out, and the cold

just stopped up everything in him,

made his bones shake with fever

each day, and cold will preserve

everything, good and bad; like all those sad

feelings he would feel when he heard news

of the deaths in his family down there on

those sea islands where the body worked

itself to death to fatten those white folks

summering in Greenville while the muggy

rice fields cooked the souls of black folk,

making a short life a blessing down there,

while he coughed away his unfinished

living in this cold place. So we stay

silent, take a breath for Garret Brown,

dead in the height of his power, dead

at 44; gone, gone, and the swirl of snow

in the air holds us still in our

perpetual sorrow, fresh as the scent

of newly butchered meat on ice.

 

Blossom

 

The tourists fear the teeming hordes.

 

In the gloom they can hear the earth

breathing. It sounds like

a multitude so tired of running,

 

so tired of talking, so tired

of protesting, the fingers blistered

from the burning of the offending

 

thing; their bodies so worn

out from marching, with just

enough left in them to make

 

the slow march back home

with the mountain’s long

shadows leading them along

 

the path; or to make one last

leap, sprint, howl into

the horror—in the gloom it is

 

possible to hear the gap

between thought and thought-

lessness, between memory

 

and forgetting, between mercy

and mindlessness. The tourists

do not want their hearts to thrum

 

in their throats, but like all

who fall prey to the throng,

they are seduced by the fat

 

nocturnal bloom of a flower:

off-white, almost golden cream,

smiling handsomely at them,

 

and they risk all to seek it out,

to pluck it, to pretend as if

it will last beyond the journey

 

and continue to glow

back in their dull grey-steel world.


Kwame Dawes is a Ghanaian-born Jamaican poet, the award-winning author of sixteen books of poetry (most recently, Wheels, 2011) and numerous books of fiction, non-fiction, criticism and drama. He is the Glenna Luschei Editor of Prairie Schooner, and a Chancellor’s Professor of English at the University of Nebraska. He also teaches in the Pacific MFA Writing program.

In Poetry, Print Tags Kwame Dawes, 2014 spring vol. 7 issue 1
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