The New Testament

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by Jericho Brown

Money in mattresses

  So to sleep on decisions.

  Some of their children

  Were not their children. Some

  Of their parents had no birthdates.

  They could sweat a cold out

  Of you. They’d wake without

  An alarm telling them to.

  Even the short ones reached

  Certain shelves. Even the skinny

  Cooked animals too quick

  To catch. And I don’t care

  How ugly one of them arrived,

  That one got married

  To somebody fine. They fed

  Families with change and wiped

  Their kitchens clean.

  Then another century came.

  People like me forgot their names.

  II

  The Ten Commandments

  But I could be covetous. I could be a thief.

  Could want and work for. Could wire and

  Deceive. I thought to fool the moon into

  A doubt. I did some doubting. Lord,

  Forgive me. In New Orleans that winter,

  I waited for a woman to find me shirtless

  On her back porch. Why? She meant it

  Rhetorically and hit me with open hands.

  How many times can a woman say why

  With her hands in the moonlight? I counted

  Ten like light breaking hard on my head,

  Ten rhetorical whys and half a moon. Half-

  Nude, I let her light into me. I could be last

  On a list of lovers Joe Adams would see,

  And first to find his wife slapping the spit

  Out of me. I could be sick and sullen. I could

  Sulk and sigh. I could be a novel character

  By E. Lynn Harris, but even he’d allow me

  Some dignity. He loved black people too

  Much to write about a wife whipping her rival

  On a night people in Louisiana call cold.

  He’d have Joe Adams run out back and pull

  Her off of me. He wouldn’t think I deserved it.

  Homeland

  I knew I had jet lag because no one would make love to me.

  All the men thought me a vampire. All the women were

  Women. In America that year, black people kept dreaming

  That the president got shot. Then the president got shot

  Breaking into the White House. He claimed to have lost

  His keys. What’s the proper name for a man caught stealing

  Into his own home? I asked a few passengers. They replied,

  Jigger. After that, I took the red-eye. I took to a sigh deep

  As the end of a day in the dark fields below us. Some slept,

  But nobody named Security ever believes me. Confiscated—

  My Atripla. My Celexa. My Cortisone. My Klonopin. My

  Flexeril. My Zyrtec. My Nasarel. My Percocet. My Ambien.

  Nobody in this nation feels safe, and I’m still a reason why.

  Every day, something gets thrown away on account of long

  History or hair or fingernails or, yes, of course, my fangs.

  Host

  We want pictures of everything

  Below your waist, and we want

  Pictures of your waist. We can’t

  Talk right now, but we will text you

  Into coitus. All thumbs. All bi

  Coastal and discreet and masculine

  And muscular. No whites. Every

  Body a top. We got a career

  To think about. No face. We got

  Kids to remember. No one over 29.

  No one under 30. Our exes hurt us

  Into hurting them. Disease free. No

  Drugs. We like to get high with

  The right person. You

  Got a girl? Bring your boy.

  We visiting. Room at the W.

  Name’s D. Name’s J. We DeeJay.

  We Trey. We Troy. We Q. We not

  Sending a face. Where should we

  Go tonight? You coming through? Please

  Know what a gym looks like. Not much

  Time. No strings. No place, no

  Face. Be clean. We haven’t met

  Anyone here yet. Why is it so hard

  To make friends? No games. You

  Still coming through? Latinos only.

  Blacks will do. We can take one right

  Now. Text it to you. Be there next

  Week. Be there in June. We not a phone

  Person. We can host, but we won’t meet

  Without a recent pic and a real name

  And the sound of your deepest voice.

  Football Season

  But the game includes killing

  Boys in another country.

  At the end of this beer,

  I pay a tax, make sure

  They’re dead. A man asks to change

  The channel, unaware of his own safety.

  Barflies look at him as if he’s spilled

  The final pint of ale. Loneliness

  Is a practice. Like medicine.

  Like law, the law of the land

  Live in twenty-four time zones.

  The last man standing is

  The first one alone. Which of us

  Is too drunk to stagger

  Home? Not me. I can drink

  A few more, see the Patriots

  Or the Cowboys or another

  Very long war right

  Here on this stool, watching

  My money work for me, the heat

  Up and me comfortable enough

  To complain about it.

  The Rest We Deserve

  Our walls are thin, and the man who won’t say hello

  Back to me in the morning as we lock ourselves out

  Of our homes—won’t even nod my way as black men

  Do when they see themselves in you—sings “Precious,

  Precious,” the only song he must know, to the newborn

  Other neighbors tell me is all he has left of a woman

  Who died, went to rehab, or left him for another,

  Depending on the fool telling the story and the time

  Of day it gets told. I don’t know why it bothers me.

  I don’t need him to love me the way he loves that child,

  Pacing an apartment I imagine looks just like mine

  With a baby in his arms, none of us allowed the rest

  We deserve, him awful and off-key, her—is it a she?—

  Shrill as any abandoned animal should be. I want

  To hurt him, and I want to help. I think of knocking

  To say he doesn’t have to be polite to me, but he should

  Try stuffing the kid in a drawer and closing it; or

  Knocking to show him the magic made when you sit

  An infant in a car seat on top of a washer while you do

  A little late-night laundry. Why do I think he owes me,

  That all the words to Jackie Moore’s one hit make him

  Mine enough not to mind some man he sees me kiss good-

  Bye while he rolls his eyes, a baby strapped to his chest,

  A tie around his neck, and me yawning because somebody

  Wouldn’t let me sleep, everyone wishing any voice in this

  Building could sing for the thing growing in the smallest

  Of us when we open our mouths at odd hours to shriek?

  What the Holy Do

  for Previn Keith Butler (1978–2009)

  Back when I was God, I had friends.

  We wrote our own Bible

  And got thrown out of church.

  Then I saw one of us again—a man

  Pushing into him

  From behind. He turned

  His final face to the camera

  Like a teenager coming

  Upon a pimple in the mirror.

  The lonely worship alone.

  I search out such filth in the cathedral

  Of my home, but
this time,

  With a sheet, I covered the screen.

  That’s what the holy do to the body

  After shutting its eyes,

  And that’s this scribe’s last vision

  Of another poorly recorded life

  As I talk to myself in late July, dragging

  A fan behind me like an oxygen tank.

  Reality Show

  An editor… wrote back that she liked the “Negro” poems best… requested that Gwendolyn [Brooks] approach Knopf again when she had more of these.

  AMY SICKELS

  NEWS

  It is like a love for men, this

  Love of language, and we are

  Men at war, says the news.

  No matter how long we speak

  English, English means not

  To count us or to count us

  Darkly, but I know what

  I want and so does channel 4.

  They give it to me, one heap

  After another: soldiers who,

  Following another battle, shed,

  Sweat, and spit like fountains.

  THE HOUSEWIVES

  All dese negroes calln us cute

  But aint nobody tryna pay de light bill

  Brothas on both coasts sayin Damn you

  Sexy But not one payin dis light bill

  And here our grinnin asses go after each Compliment

  Lettin de fine ones cop a feel

  TALK SHOW

  We can talk love

  If you want,

  Though I need fuel,

  Need bread, bed,

  And sex. I go

  To my pocket

  For change. One nickel

  Fails me, so I find

  Another, dead man

  At my finger, monument

  Against my thumb. Take,

  For instance, our love.

  Take or give it away,

  Or sell it for all

  I care, for the next

  Nickel I pinch, not much

  Money to debate or make

  You stay long

  Enough to turn on

  The TV where we see

  The real world done

  And watch a man

  Grin then run

  A finger through

  His enemy’s hair.

  THE BACHELOR

  All dese negroes swear Im cute

  But none of em payin dis light bill

  Liars in Lithonia and doctors in Detroit say

  Damn you sexy But dey wont pay dis light bill

  Still my ass go grinnin after each

  Goldtoothed word

  I can feel feel feel

  Willing to Pay

  It’s your face I wanted. Spent

  Days at the dentist hoping

  He’d hammer the smile right.

  Your face and that thing

  You do with your eyes

  When I get you livid. Don’t be

  Flattered. Don’t be afraid.

  It’s 1979 or so. I’m known

  To lie about my age. My parents

  Are trying again. How’s that

  For language, the moans

  They made making me. If only

  One of them lasted longer,

  If they preferred the dog to some

  Other position, then maybe I’d be

  The same on both sides or

  A babyface the rest of my life.

  This is the night of a thousand

  Noses. You want entertainment,

  But how can I watch TV knowing

  A guy cuter than me is getting paid

  To wink, and I’m the one

  Willing to pay? I wonder awhile

  At football. At least, I’d have had

  A lovely set of calves. Everybody

  Who eats loves an athlete

  Naked and newly showered.

  What’s fair? You got the face

  And the body and the cameras

  Calling while I got you

  Waiting for me to put the w

  Behind the o in words like

  Now. Now look, I bought you

  Something else, something perfect

  For hanging on that wall you wanted

  Up. The painter did the damnedest

  Job pulling your lips close to mine.

  Dear Dr. Frankenstein

  I, too, know the science of building men

  Out of fragments in little light

  Where I’ll be damned if lightning don’t

  Strike as I forget one

  May have a thief’s thumb,

  Another, a murderer’s arm,

  And watch the men I’ve made leave

  Like an idea I meant to write down,

  Like a vehicle stuck

  In reverse, like the monster

  God came to know the moment

  Adam named animals and claimed

  Eve, turning from heaven to her

  As if she was his

  To run. No word he said could be tamed.

  No science. No design. Nothing taken

  Gently into his hand or your hand or mine,

  Nothing we erect is our own.

  Another Elegy

  I want to relax, but it’s April.

  My students cross and un-

  Cross bare legs, one thigh,

  In turn, holding the other

  Down. Each limb,

  Every stem on Earth

  At battle, studded

  With buds, all cocked

  To win as the world

  Splits into its stains. I live

  With a disease instead

  Of a lover. We take turns

  Doing bad things

  To my body, share a house

  But do not speak. We eat

  What I feed. Spring is a leg

  And can’t be covered. One day,

  I was born. That was long ago.

  Motherland

  Our mother swears the woman’s nose is wide enough

  To dam the Red River.

  Our mother says you could drain a swamp through

  The gap in Angel’s teeth.

  She’s too bottom-heavy for her clothes. Even in a housedress,

  She looks like a whore fit for music videos.

  Our mother keeps asking why so many music videos

  Are filmed at pools and beaches.

  Mama doesn’t care that Angel has two kids

  Or that she dropped out of school before

  Meeting my brother—and while I want someone

  To say what a shame it is that she outdrinks

  Our dad at Thanksgiving—Angel’s looks are all

  Our mother will criticize, turning watery eyes

  From my brother to me,

  Pray my other boy won’t bring anybody as ugly home.

  And I never do.

  He was a fool for a tall woman, and Angel stood taller than him in any pair of shoes. He saw her the way children see the trees they climb, their mothers cussing down below.

  After his car quit, I’d pick him up for work. He’d light his morning cigarette and fidget with my stereo for something repetitive, explicit—the kind of music born when we were, the one sound we had in common.

  I shouldn’t, but I’m thinking

  About the woman who got shot

  Fighting over that sweat-soaked

  Headscarf Teddy Pendergrass threw

  Into the crowd at one of those

  Shows he put on for “Ladies

  Only” the year I was born. How

  Many women reached

  Before the tallest two forgot

  Their new fingernails matched

  Purses and shoes? I’m no good.

  I thought I’d be bored with men

  And music by now, voices tender

  As the wound Pendergrass could feel

  When he heard what caused gunfire

  Was a trick he rehearsed. Love,

  Quick and murderous, bleeding

  Pr
oof of talent. He wanted to be

  What we pay to see—Of course,

  That’s not special. I imagine

  Someone who desires any

  Worn piece of man must be

  Willing to shoot or be shot.

  As we veered onto Line Avenue, he stopped the music, Sometimes, I call Angel those names. She throws forks and plates when I do.

  He got out of my car laughing, but with his head in the window like it was his last chance at giving advice, It feels good to have a woman fine as she is so mad at you.

  Before he saw Eve, the serpent walked upright

  And climbed and crawled like a man with limbs.

  He tangled himself in reaches for green, prized

  The curves of his quick and endlessly slim

  Body. Days were years then. The woman spent

  Most days in giggles or gorged on something

  Significant placed in her palms. The serpent

  Admired her wandering, her ease at being

  Described, entered. No one wanted, but even that garden

  Grew against the ground’s will, and this,

  Child, I tell you since soon you’ll grow and harden—

  No matter how low she seemed squatting to piss,

  The damned snake couldn’t stop staring, and she couldn’t

  Understand—though he inched close enough

  To whisper something wet and true. He needed to confront

  Her with what he knew, needed her stuffed

  On a sweet that made her see herself, see him

  And every beast in the young world watching.

  That wasn’t the day she killed him. They fought and called the police on each other for years. Nobody paid any mind.

  But if I turn too quick on Line with the worst music, I can hear him again, explaining the satisfaction of hurting a woman who’s still there the next morning. I think that’s why he loved Angel, ugly or fine. What man wouldn’t love a woman like that? And why can’t I?

  I Corinthians 13:11

  When I was a child, I spoke as a child.

  I even had a child’s disease. I ran

  From the Doberman like all children

  On my street, but old men called me

  Special. The Doberman caught up,

  Chewed my right knee. Limp now

 

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