after Danez Smith
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nA blues song came to me.
nMy mouth opened to sing
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n& out floated morning glories, sun-kissed mangos.
nThe blues needed me to create a garden.
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nMy God, turn my tears into rain to nourish the soil.
nIt has been nearly a year since the sky took my mother.
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nThe blues is angry at the sky so I go for a walk.
nI seek a man who will turn my pain into pleasure.
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nIt is what I deserve. The sky watches our bodies
ncreate gardens all around the hood. A harvest
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ngrows in every empty lot, rusted-over playground
n& abandoned building. Lust dulls the blues’ anger.
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nInstead of praying, we move our bodies, entangled
nin the rain we have made. Here is where we lay,
nman & woman, my sweat could be tears.
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nThe blues knows the hood so well. It travels
nevery street, greeting every black & brown person
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nWho embraces it. Sing the old songs. I forgot
nthe lyrics in my lust. The sky turns the clouds
ngray. Madness or Sadness? I care not
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nFor the police or the bullets. Lord, let us
nsing a new song! The blues needs a break.
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nGod, forgive us for our dalliances. We need
nto break apart the sky. Turn the clouds into
npieces of cotton then shred them.
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nWith my lovers, I have a reunion. We dance
nunder a broken sky. The blues is silent.
nThe hood is silent.
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nThe police rob another neighborhood
nof its peace. The bullets remain in their
nchambers. I see my mother’s smile
nin the stars.
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nu00a9 Shirley Jones-Luke
nnShirley Jones-Luke is a poet and a writer from Boston, Massachusetts. USA.
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