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Saturday, April 10, 2010

Day 10: "Any Other Sad Man"


African blues


does not know me. Their steps, in sands

of their own

land. A country

in black & white, newspapers

blown down pavements

of the world. Does

not feel

what I am.



Strength



in the dream, an oblique

suckling of nerve, the wind

throws up sand, eyes

are something locked in

hate, of hate, of hate, to

walk abroad, they conduct

their deaths apart

from my own. Those

heads, I call

my "people."



(And who are they. People. To concern



myself, ugly man. Who

you, to concern

the white flat stomachs

of maidens, inside houses

dying. Black. Peeled moon

light on my fingers

move under

her clothes. Where

is her husband. Black

words throw up sand

to eyes, fingers of

their private dead. Whose

soul, eyes, in sand. My color

is not theirs. Lighter, white man

talk. They shy away. My own

dead souls, my, so called

people. Africa

is a foreign place. You are

as any other sad man here

american.

...Notes for a Speech by Amiri Baraka, Newark
 
Baraka's words recall music and anticiapte the next poem or lecture.  Check his website for the essays, too.  A brilliant speaker.
 
Keep reading and writing,
 
Maureen

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