I Take Master Card(Charge Your Love to Me)I’ve heard the stories
’bout how you don’t deserve me
’cause I’m so strong and beautiful and wonderful and you could
never live up to what you know I should have but I just want to let you know:I take Master CardYou can love me as much as your heart can stand
then put the rest on
account and pay the interest
each month until we get this thing settled You see we modern women do comprehend
that we deserve a whole lot more
than what is normally being offered but we are trying
to get aligned with the modern worldSo baby you can love me all
you like ’cause you’re pre-approved
and you don’t have to sign on
the bottom lineCharge it up
’til we just can’t take no more
it’s the modern wayI take Master Card
to see your Visa
and I deal with a Discover but I don’t want any American
Express ’cause like the Pointer Sisters say: I need a slow hand.
Month: February 2020
‘valentine of desire’
StandardNot Touching
–Billy Collins
The valentine of desire is pasted over my heart
and still we are not touching, like thingsin a poorly done still life
where the knife appears to be floating over the plate
which is itself hovering above the table somehow,the entire arrangement of apple, pear, and wineglass
having forgotten the law of gravity,
refusing to be still,as if the painter had caught them all
in a rare moment of slow flight
just before they drifted out of the room
through a window of perfectly realistic sunlight.
suicide’s note
StandardSuicide’s Note
–Langston HughesThe calm,Cool face of the riverAsked me for a kiss.
stake
StandardStake
–Jericho Brown
I am a they in most of America. Someone feels lost in the forest Of we, so he can’t imagine A single tree. He can’t bear it. A cross. A crucifixion. Such A Christian. All that wood Headed his way in the fact Of a man or a woman who Might as well be a secret, so Serious his need to see inside. To cut down. To tell. How Old will I get to be in a nation That believes we can grow out Of a grave? Can reach. Climb High as the First State Bank. Take a bullet. Break through Concrete. The sidewalk. The street someone crosses When he sees wilderness where He wanted his city. His cross- Tie. His telephone pole. Timber. Timbre. It’s an awful Sound, and people pay to hear It. People say bad things about Me, though they don’t know My name. I have a name. A stake. I settle. Dig. Die. Go underground. Tunnel The ocean floor. Root. Shoot Up like a thought someone Planted. Someone planted An idea of me. A lie. A lawn Jockey. The myth of a wooded Hamlet in America, a thicket, Hell, a patch of sunlit grass Where any one of us bursts into One someone as whole as we.
to be in love
StandardTo Be in Love
–Gwendolyn BrooksTo be in love
Is to touch with a lighter hand.
In yourself you stretch, you are well.
You look at things
Through his eyes.
A cardinal is red.
A sky is blue.
Suddenly you know he knows too.
He is not there but
You know you are tasting together
The winter, or a light spring weather.
His hand to take your hand is overmuch.
Too much to bear.
You cannot look in his eyes
Because your pulse must not say
What must not be said.
When he
Shuts a door-
Is not there_
Your arms are water.
And you are free
With a ghastly freedom.
You are the beautiful half
Of a golden hurt.
You remember and covet his mouth
To touch, to whisper on.
Oh when to declare
Is certain Death!
Oh when to apprize
Is to mesmerize,
To see fall down, the Column of Gold,
Into the commonest ash.
sip
StandardSip
–Rudy FranciscoI take my compliments
the same way I take
my coffee.I don’t drink coffee.
The last time I did,
it seared my entire mouth
and I couldn’t taste
anything for three days.I’m still learning how to
let endearment sit until
it’s ready to be consumed,hold it to my lips
and sip slowly.
separation
StandardSeparation
–Audre LordeThe stars dwindle
and will not reward me
even in triumph.It is possible
to shoot a man
in self defense
and still notice
how his red blood
decorates the snow.
said simple
StandardWho Said It Was Simple
–Audre LordeThere are so many roots to the tree of anger
that sometimes the branches shatter
before they bear.Sitting in Nedicks
the women rally before they march
discussing the problematic girls
they hire to make them free.
An almost white counterman passes
a waiting brother to serve them first
and the ladies neither notice nor reject
the slighter pleasures of their slavery.
But I who am bound by my mirror
as well as my bed
see causes in colour
as well as sexand sit here wondering
which me will survive
all these liberations.
be mad
StandardWhy Some People Be Mad at Me Sometimes
–Lucille Cliftonthey ask me to remember
but they want me to remember
their memories
and i keep on remembering
mine.
ugly mouth
StandardInvisible Dreams
–Toi DerricotteLa poesie vit d’insomnie perpetuelle
—René CharThere’s a sickness in me. Duringthe night I wake up & it’s broughta stain into my mouth, as ifan ocean has risen & left backa stink on the rocks of my teeth.I stink. My mouth is ugly, humanstink. A color like rustis in me. I can’t get rid of it.It rises after Ibrush my teeth, a tastelike iron. In thenight, left like a dream,a caustic lightwashing over the insides of me.*What to do with my arms? Theycoil out of my bodylike snakes.They branch & spit.I want to shake myselfuntil they fall like witheredroots; untilthey bend the right way—until I fit in them,or they in me.I have to lay them down ascarefully as an old wedding dress,I have to fold themlike the arms of someone dead.The house is quiet; allnight I struggle. Allbecause of my arms,which have no peace!*I’m a martyr, a girl who’s been deadtwo thousand years. I turnon my left side, like one comfortableafter a long, hard death.The angels look downtenderly. “She’s sleeping,” they say& pass me by. Butall night, I am passingin & out of my bodyon my naked feet.*I’m awake when I’m sleeping & I’msleeping when I’m awake, & no oneknows, not even me, for my eyesare closed to myself.I think I am thinking I seea man beside me, & he thinksin his sleep that I’m awakewriting. I hear a pen scratcha paper. There is some ideaI think is clever: I want tocapture myself in a book.*I have to make aplace for my body inmy body. I’m like adog pawing a blanketon the floor. I have toturn & twist myselflike a rag until Ican smell myself in myself.I’m sweating; the water ispouring out of melike silver. I put my headin the crook of my armlike a brilliant moon.*The bones of my left footare too heavy on the bonesof my right. Theylie still for a little while,sleeping, but soon theybruise each other likeangry twins. Thenthe bones of my right footcommand the bones of my leftto climb down.