Read The Collected Poetry of Nikki Giovanni Online
Authors: Nikki Giovanni
The art of Charles White is like making love
in the early evening
after the cabs have stopped
to pick you up and the doorman said
“Good evening ma'am. Pleasant weather we're having”
The images of Charles White remind me
of eating cotton candy at the zoo on a rainy day
and the candy not melting and all the other kids wondering
why
I remember once when I was little
before I smoked too many cigarettes
entering the church picnic sack race
I never expected to win just thought it would be fun
I came in second and drank at least a gallon
of lemonade then wandered off
to an old rope swing
Of all the losses of modern life the swing
in the back yard is my special regret
one dreams going back and forth of time and space
stopping bowing to one's sheer magnificence
pumping higher and higher space blurs time
and the world stops spinning while I in my swing
give a curtsey correctly
my pigtails in place and my bangs cut
just right
“But why aren't the artists the politicians” she asked
“because they're too nice” was the reply
“too logical too compassionate”
which not understanding I took to mean “sexy”âat least
that's how come and passionate were used in the novels
Johnetta and I used to sneak and read
And in the grown up world I think I understand
that passion is politics that being is beauty
and we are all in some measure responsible
for the life we live and the world
we live in
Some of us take the air, the land, the sun
and misuse our spirits      others of us have earned
our right to be called men and women
Charles White and his art were introduced to me
through magazines and booksâthat's why I love them
Charles White and his art were shared with me through
love and concernâthat's why I value those
Charles White and his art live in my heart and the heart
of our peopleâthat's why I think
love is worthwhile
The drumsâ¦Pa-Rumâ¦the rat-tat-tatâ¦of drumsâ¦
The Pied Piperâ¦after leading the ratsâ¦to deathâ¦took
the childrenâ¦to dreamsâ¦Pa-Rum Pa-Rumâ¦
The big bass drumsâ¦the kettles roarâ¦the sound of
animal fleshâ¦resounding against the woodâ¦Pa-Rum
Pa-Rumâ¦
Kunta Kinte was making a drumâ¦when he was
capturedâ¦Pa-Rumâ¦
Thoreau listenedâ¦to a different drumâ¦rat-tat-tat-Pa-
Rumâ¦
King said just sayâ¦I was a Drum Majorâ¦for peaceâ¦
Pa-Rum Pa-Rumâ¦rat-tat-tat Pa-Rumâ¦
Drums of triumphâ¦Drums of painâ¦Drums of lifeâ¦
Funeral drumsâ¦Marching drumsâ¦Drums that callâ¦
Pa-Rum Pa-Rumâ¦the Drums that callâ¦rat-tat-tat-tatâ¦
the Drums are callingâ¦Pa-Rum Pa-Rumâ¦rat-tat-tat Pa-
Rumâ¦
Trees are never felledâ¦in summerâ¦Not when the fruitâ¦is yet to be borneâ¦Never before the promiseâ¦is fulfilledâ¦Not when their cooling shadeâ¦has yet to comfortâ¦
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Yet there are thoseâ¦unheeding of natureâ¦indifferent to ecologyâ¦ignorant of needâ¦whoâ¦with ax and sharpened sawâ¦wouldâ¦in bootsâ¦step forth damagingâ¦
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Not the treeâ¦for it fallsâ¦But those who wouldâ¦in summer's heatâ¦or winter's coldâ¦contemplateâ¦the beautyâ¦
Eagles are a majestic speciesâ¦living in the thin searing airâ¦
building
nests on precipitous ledgesâ¦
they are endangeredâ¦but unafraidâ¦
An eagle's nest is an inverted dimpleâ¦made of ready smilesâ¦
unbleached
sarisâ¦available armsâ¦and clean soap smellsâ¦
to withstand allâ¦elementsâ¦
Nestled in the chocolate chaosâ¦destined to become:
roller skaters
submarine eaters
telephone talkers
people
are improperly imprinted ducklingsâ¦
Eagles perchedâ¦on those precipitous ledgesâ¦insist upon
teachingâ¦
the youngâ¦to flyâ¦
Every time the earth movesâ¦it's meâ¦and all my friendsâ¦flying undergroundâ¦Off to a soccer gameâ¦or basketball showdownâ¦sometimes stickballâ¦baseballâ¦wicketâ¦Sweat falls from cloudsâ¦crowded 'neath the sunâ¦cheering usâ¦Sweat climbs upâ¦to morning grassâ¦when we run too fastâ¦Always runningâ¦always funâ¦flying undergroundâ¦I can make the earth moveâ¦flying undergroundâ¦
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I workâ¦Saturday afternoonsâ¦and sometimes after schoolâ¦Going to the storeâ¦for Mrs. Millie Worthingtonâ¦Everybody knows herâ¦with her legs swollenâ¦'bout to burstâ¦Most times Chinkâ¦Mr. Chink Mama saysâ¦but everybody calls him Chinkâ¦gives me a dimeâ¦to get his snuffâ¦or some chewing tobaccoâ¦Always go to Hunter Streetâ¦or to the Coliseumâ¦when a show's in townâ¦Do groceriesâ¦bagsâ¦peanuts/popcorn/ice cold pop!â¦Never gonna do dopeâ¦but maybe run a numberâ¦Walkingâ¦runningâ¦I get tiredâ¦Been coldâ¦but not too muchâ¦Never beenâ¦really hungryâ¦Just get tiredâ¦a lotâ¦
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Teacher says I doâ¦real goodâ¦in schoolâ¦I like to read booksâ¦where things happenâ¦if I was Tomâ¦Sawyer I'd get that fenceâ¦paintedâ¦I draw picturesâ¦with lots of sun and cloudsâ¦Like to play I doâ¦a lotâ¦and I talkâ¦in classâ¦
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I cried onceâ¦I don't know whyâ¦I can't remember nowâ¦Mrs. Evans held my handâ¦Nothing holds me nowâ¦They opened up a spotâ¦and put me undergroundâ¦Don't cry Mamaâ¦look for meâ¦I'm flyingâ¦
There is nothingâ¦that can be saidâ¦that can frighten meâ¦anymoreâ¦Sadden meâ¦perhapsâ¦disgust meâ¦certainlyâ¦but not make me afraidâ¦It has been saidâ¦Learn What You Fearâ¦Then Make Love To Itâ¦dance with itâ¦put it on your dresserâ¦and kiss it goodâ¦nightâ¦Say itâ¦over and overâ¦until in the darkest hourâ¦from the deepest sleepâ¦you can be awakenedâ¦to say Yesâ¦
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She never learnedâ¦no matter how often people triedâ¦that it was hersâ¦the fear and the Lifeâ¦the glory of the gambleâ¦It was her quarterâ¦she had to pick the machineâ¦She never understoodâ¦simple dutyâ¦knowing only to give all of herselfâ¦or noneâ¦There was no balanceâ¦to her triangleâ¦though three pointsâ¦are the strongest mathematical figuresâ¦no tingleâ¦when struckâ¦no joyâ¦in her songâ¦no comfort in her chairâ¦war/always warâ¦with whom she wasâ¦who she wanted to beâ¦and what they wantedâ¦of herâ¦
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One reason I thinkâ¦I am qualifiedâ¦to run the worldâ¦though my appointment is not imminentâ¦is when I getâ¦what I wantâ¦I am happyâ¦It is surprising to meâ¦how few people areâ¦When they winâ¦like Richard Nixon or John McEnroeâ¦they are unhappyâ¦when they loseâ¦impossibleâ¦One reason I thinkâ¦I have neither ulcers nor nail biting habitsâ¦is I know to be carefulâ¦of what I wantâ¦I just may get itâ¦
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She was never taughtâ¦that everything is earnedâ¦that Newton was rightâ¦for every action there is an equal and opposite reactionâ¦Interest is obtainedâ¦only on Savingsâ¦Personality is developedâ¦only on riskâ¦What is soughtâ¦must first
be givenâ¦We please othersâ¦by only allowing them accessâ¦to that part of ourselves which is publicâ¦If familiarity breeds contemptâ¦use breeds hatredâ¦
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Turtlesâ¦the kind you find in pet storesâ¦the kind Darwin met on Galápagosâ¦grow to fit the environmentâ¦There areâ¦probablyâ¦some genetic limitsâ¦but a small turtleâ¦in a small bowlâ¦will not outgrowâ¦her homeâ¦Flowersâ¦will riseâ¦proportionate more to the sizeâ¦of the potâ¦than the relationship of sunâ¦to rainâ¦Humans seldom deviateâ¦If she hadn't been a small town girlâ¦with a mind and heart molded absolutelyâ¦to fit the environmentâ¦she might have developedâ¦a real skillâ¦a real desireâ¦to discover herselfâ¦and her giftsâ¦As it wasâ¦as it isâ¦she simply got usedâ¦and used to usingâ¦
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She was never a lonerâ¦never madeâ¦to understand that lifeâ¦in factâ¦is a solitary journeyâ¦that only
one
â¦was going to St. Ivesâ¦that no one held her bagâ¦while the old woman traveled to Skookumâ¦that the Little Red Hen and the Engine That Couldâ¦did it themselvesâ¦She wasâ¦let's face itâ¦the leader of the packâ¦the top of the heapâ¦cheerleader extraordinaireâ¦She was very popularâ¦sought after by all the right peopleâ¦for her jokesâ¦her partiesâ¦her parents' carâ¦The telephone was inventedâ¦just for herâ¦She set up the friendshipsâ¦the going steadysâ¦the class officersâ¦yearbook staffâ¦Who's-In-Who's-Outâ¦through the witch wireâ¦Nothing could happenâ¦without her inputâ¦She actually thoughtâ¦it was importantâ¦who went with whomâ¦to the junior promâ¦But somebody had to pick up the fallen streamersâ¦sweep the now scarred dance floorâ¦turn out the lights before they could go homeâ¦
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We were bornâ¦in the same yearâ¦our mothers deliveredâ¦by the same doctorâ¦of the same cityâ¦in the same hospitalâ¦We were little chubby girls in pinkâ¦passing cigarettes at
the lawn partiesâ¦My mother made me playâ¦with herâ¦and hersâ¦with meâ¦We didn't really mindâ¦we shared the same friendsâ¦hersâ¦and the same ideasâ¦mineâ¦Maybe I becameâ¦too accustomedâ¦to the samenessâ¦It was certainly easierâ¦for me to shedâ¦her friendsâ¦than she to shedâ¦my notionsâ¦Our mothers belongedâ¦to the same clubsâ¦Our fathers trackedâ¦the same night devilsâ¦They all had the same expectationsâ¦fromâ¦ofâ¦atâ¦or toâ¦usâ¦I liked to broodâ¦she didn'tâ¦She liked to laughâ¦I didn'tâ¦I thought I was uglyâ¦she didn'tâ¦
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Pots are taught not to call kettles Blackâ¦people who live in glass housesâ¦don't throw stonesâ¦small town girls learn earlyâ¦or not at allâ¦that they can make a lifeâ¦or abort the promiseâ¦One of us triedâ¦one of us didn't have toâ¦To eachâ¦according to her birthâ¦from each according to her abilityâ¦Which is bastardized Marxâ¦but legitimate bourgeoisieâ¦She was never caringâ¦She never learned to seeâ¦beyond her own windshieldâ¦that there were other people on the sidewalkâ¦other carsâ¦on the roadâ¦She drankâ¦too muchâ¦for too longâ¦Maybe in the back of her mindâ¦or heartâ¦or closetâ¦there was a sign saying: There-Is-More-Than-Thisâ¦but she wouldn't pull it outâ¦put it upâ¦or even acknowledge that some thingsâ¦many thingsâ¦were missingâ¦I acceptâ¦if not embraceâ¦the painâ¦the sign on my car says: I Brake For Gnomesâ¦the one in my heart reads: Error In ProcessâPlease Send Chocolateâ¦
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Into the rising sunâ¦or setting yearsâ¦accustomed to the scattered friends littering the roadâ¦she drives onâ¦with the confidence of small town drivers who know every wayfallâ¦toward the smaller mindsâ¦around the once hopeful loversâ¦into the illusion of what it isâ¦to be a womanâ¦through the delusion that trip necessitatesâ¦never once slowingâ¦to ask Did I Hurt Youâ¦May I Love Youâ¦Can I/May I Please Giveâ¦You A Liftâ¦With the suretyâ¦of one who never had to walkâ¦she
acceleratesâ¦toward boredomâ¦secure in the understandingâ¦that everybody knows herâ¦and would be unlikely to ticketâ¦her cruising carâ¦She was my friendâ¦more than a sisterâ¦reallyâ¦a part of the mirrorâ¦against which I adjustâ¦my makeupâ¦I have no directionsâ¦but here is a signâ¦Thomas Wolfe was wrongâ¦Maybe it will be readâ¦
Moving slowlyâ¦against timeâ¦patiently majesticâ¦the cyclopsâ¦in the oceanâ¦meets no Ulyssesâ¦
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Through the nightâ¦he sighsâ¦throbbing against the shoreâ¦declaringâ¦for the adventureâ¦
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A wall of grayâ¦gathered by a slow touchâ¦slash and slitherâ¦through the waiting screensâ¦separating into nodulesâ¦making my panesâ¦accept the touchâ¦
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Not contentâ¦to watch my frightened gazeâ¦he clamors beneath the sashâ¦dancing on my sillâ¦
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Certain to dieâ¦when the sunâ¦returnsâ¦
There is an old storyâ¦I learned in churchâ¦one eveningâ¦about a preacherâ¦and his deaconâ¦fishingâ¦It seems that every timeâ¦the good brother got a biteâ¦the fish would scamperâ¦awayâ¦and the deaconâ¦would curseâ¦The preacherâ¦probably feelingâ¦his profession demandedâ¦a responseâ¦said to the deacon Brotherâ¦should you curse like thatâ¦with me hereâ¦over some fishâ¦And the deacon agreedâ¦They fished onâ¦the deacon losing more fishâ¦when finally a big big oneâ¦got awayâ¦The deacon remembered his vowâ¦looked at his empty poleâ¦reminded himself of the vowâ¦looked at his empty poleâ¦sucked in his breathâ¦turned to the preacherâ¦and remarked Reverendâ¦Something Needs To Be Saidâ¦
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I guess everybody wantsâ¦to be specialâ¦and prettyâ¦the boysâ¦just want to be strongâ¦or fastâ¦all the same thingsâ¦children wantâ¦everywhereâ¦It was ordinaryâ¦as far as I can seeâ¦my childhoodâ¦butâ¦wellâ¦I don't knowâ¦muchâ¦about psychologyâ¦We had a lot of prideâ¦growing upâ¦in Tuskegeeâ¦You could easily seeâ¦what our people could doâ¦if somebody set a mindâ¦to itâ¦Father was a carpenterâ¦Mama taught schoolâ¦I got marriedâ¦at nineteenâ¦
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You always feltâ¦you should do somethingâ¦It just wasn't rightâ¦what they did to Negroesâ¦and why Negroesâ¦let it happenâ¦Colored people couldn't voteâ¦couldn't use the bathroom in public placesâ¦couldn't go to the same library they paid taxes forâ¦had to sit on the back of the busesâ¦couldn't live placesâ¦work placesâ¦go to moviesâ¦amusement parksâ¦Nothingâ¦if you were coloredâ¦Just signsâ¦always signsâ¦saying Noâ¦Noâ¦Noâ¦
My husband is a fine manâ¦a fighting manâ¦When we were youngâ¦belonging to the N double A C P was radicalâ¦dangerousâ¦People got killedâ¦run out of townâ¦beaten and burned outâ¦just for belongingâ¦My husband belongedâ¦and I belongedâ¦In 1943â¦during the warâ¦Double Victory was just as importantâ¦one thing without the other was not goodâ¦enoughâ¦I was elected Secretaryâ¦of the Montgomery branchâ¦I am proudâ¦of thatâ¦Many people just think Historyâ¦just fell on my shouldersâ¦or at my feetâ¦1 december 1955â¦but that's not trueâ¦
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Sometimes it seemed it was never goingâ¦to stopâ¦That same driverâ¦who had me arrestedâ¦had put me off a busâ¦from Maxwell Air Baseâ¦where I had workedâ¦or maybe they allâ¦look the sameâ¦I wasn't lookingâ¦for anythingâ¦That Colvin girl had been arrestedâ¦and nobody did anythingâ¦I didn't thinkâ¦they would do anythingâ¦when the driver told usâ¦it was four of usâ¦to moveâ¦Three people movedâ¦I didn'tâ¦I couldn'tâ¦it was just soâ¦wrongâ¦Nobody offered to goâ¦with meâ¦A neighborâ¦on the same busâ¦didn't even tellâ¦my husbandâ¦what had happenedâ¦I just thoughtâ¦we should let them knowâ¦
I
should let them knowâ¦it wasn't rightâ¦You have to realizeâ¦I was forty years oldâ¦all my lifeâ¦all I'd seenâ¦were signsâ¦that everything was getting worseâ¦
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The press people cameâ¦around afterâ¦we wonâ¦I had to reenactâ¦everythingâ¦I was on the aisleâ¦the man by the windowâ¦got upâ¦I don't fault himâ¦for getting upâ¦he was just doingâ¦what he was toldâ¦Across the aisle were two womenâ¦they got upâ¦tooâ¦There was a lot of violenceâ¦physical and verbalâ¦I kinda thoughtâ¦something might happenâ¦to meâ¦I just didn'tâ¦couldn'tâ¦get upâ¦
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They always tell us oneâ¦person doesn't make any differenceâ¦but it seems to meâ¦somethingâ¦should be doneâ¦In all
these yearsâ¦it's strangeâ¦but maybe notâ¦nobody asksâ¦about my lifeâ¦If I have childrenâ¦why I moved to Detroitâ¦what I thinkâ¦about what we triedâ¦to doâ¦somehowâ¦you want to say thingsâ¦are betterâ¦somehowâ¦they areâ¦not in many waysâ¦Peopleâ¦older peopleâ¦are afraidâ¦younger peopleâ¦are tooâ¦I really don't knowâ¦where it will endâ¦Our peopleâ¦can breakâ¦your heartâ¦so can otherâ¦peopleâ¦I just thinkâ¦it makes a differenceâ¦what one person doesâ¦young people forget thatâ¦what one person doesâ¦makes a differenceâ¦
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The deaconâ¦of courseâ¦wanted to curseâ¦because the fish gotâ¦awayâ¦perhaps there is somethingâ¦other to be doneâ¦about the people we loseâ¦We always talkâ¦about how everyone was Blackâ¦before it was fashionableâ¦overlooking the realityâ¦that were that trueâ¦Black would have been fashionableâ¦before it wasâ¦and might have stayed in vogueâ¦longer than it didâ¦Something needs to be saidâ¦about Rosa Parksâ¦other than her feetâ¦were tiredâ¦Lots of peopleâ¦on that busâ¦and many beforeâ¦and sinceâ¦had tired feetâ¦lots of peopleâ¦still doâ¦they just don't knowâ¦where to plant themâ¦