Wade in the Water

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Wade in the Water Page 4

by Tracy K. Smith


  “Bread, toasted, with no skin.” And enough butter

  To write her name in. Or a bowl of cereal (“But

  Not the noisy kind”). She wants a movie, or maybe

  Just the tussle of her will against mine,

  That scrape and crack. Horn on rock. Rope

  Relenting one fiber at a time. “I want that,” she says,

  Punctuating what she just said she wanted.

  DUSK

  What woke to war in me those years

  When my daughter had first grown into

  A solid self-centered self? I’d watch her

  Sit at the table—well, not quite sit,

  More like stand on one leg while

  The other knee hovered just over the chair.

  She wouldn’t lower herself, as if

  There might be a fire, or a great black

  Blizzard of waves let loose in the kitchen,

  And she’d need to make her escape. No,

  She’d trust no one but herself, her own

  New lean always jittering legs to carry her—

  Where exactly? Where would a child go?

  To there. There alone. She’d rest one elbow

  On the table—the opposite one to the bent leg

  Skimming the solid expensive tasteful chair.

  And even though we were together, her eyes

  Would go half-dome, shades dropped

  Like a screen at some cinema the old aren’t

  Let into. I thought I’d have more time! I thought

  My body would have taken longer going

  About the inevitable feat of repelling her,

  But now, I could see even in what food

  She left untouched, food I’d bought and made

  And all but ferried to her lips, I could see

  How it smacked of all that had grown slack

  And loose in me. Her other arm

  Would wave the fork around just above

  The surface of the plate, casting about

  For the least possible morsel, the tiniest

  Grain of unseasoned rice. She’d dip

  Into the food like one of those shoddy

  Metal claws poised over a valley of rubber

  Bouncing balls, the kind that lifts nothing

  Or next to nothing and drops it in the chute.

  The narrow untouched hips. The shoulders

  Still so naïve as to stand squared, erect,

  Impervious facing the window open

  Onto the darkening dusk.

  URBAN YOUTH

  You’d wake me for Saturday cartoons

  When you were twelve and I was two.

  Hong Kong Phooey, Fat Albert & the Cosby Kids.

  In the ’70s, everything shone bright as brass.

  When you were twelve and I was two,

  It was always autumn. Blue sky, flimsy clouds.

  This was the ’70s. Every bright day a brass

  Trombone slept, leaning in your room.

  Autumn-crisp air. Blue skies. Clouds

  Of steam clotted the window near the stove (and

  Slept in the trombone kept in your room). You

  Wrote a poem about the sea and never forgot it.

  Steam clotted the window near the stove

  Where Mom stood sometimes staring out.

  I forget now what there was to see.

  So much now gone was only then beginning.

  Mom stood once looking out while you and

  Dad and Mike taught me to ride a two-wheeler.

  So much was only then beginning. Should

  I have been afraid? The hedges hummed with bees,

  But it was you and Dad and Mike teaching me to ride,

  Running along beside until you didn’t have to hold on.

  Who was afraid? The hedges thrummed with bees

  That only sang. Every happy thing I’ve known,

  You held, or ran alongside not having to hold.

  THE EVERLASTING SELF

  Comes in from a downpour

  Shaking water in every direction—

  A collaborative condition:

  Gathered, shed, spread, then

  Forgotten, reabsorbed. Like love

  From a lifetime ago, and mud

  A dog has tracked across the floor.

  ANNUNCIATION

  I feel ashamed, finally,

  Of our magnificent paved roads,

  Our bridges slung with steel,

  Our vivid glass, our tantalizing lights,

  Everything enhanced, rehearsed,

  A trick. I’ve turned old. I ache most

  To be confronted by the real,

  By the cold, the pitiless, the bleak.

  By the red fox crossing a field

  After snow, by the broad shadow

  Scraping past overhead.

  My young son, eyes set

  At an indeterminate distance,

  Ears locked, tuned inward, caught

  In some music only he has ever heard.

  Not our cars, our electronic haze.

  Not the piddling bleats and pings

  That cause some hearts to race.

  Ashamed. Like a pebble, hard

  And small, hoping only to be ground to dust

  By something large and strange and cruel.

  REFUGE

  Until I can understand why you

  Fled, why you are willing to bleed,

  Why you deserve what I must be

  Willing to cede, let me imagine

  You are my mother in Montgomery,

  Alabama, walking to campus

  Rather than riding the bus. I know

  What they call you, what they

  Try to convince you you lack.

  I know your tired ankles, the sudden

  Thunder of your laugh. Until

  I want to give you what I myself deserve,

  Let me love you by loving her.

  Your sister in a camp in Turkey,

  Sixteen, deserving of everything:

  Let her be my daughter, who has

  Curled her neat hands into fists,

  Insisting nothing is fair and I

  Have never loved her. Naomi,

  Lips set in a scowl, young heart

  Ransacking its cell. Let me lend

  Her passion to your sister, and

  Love her for her living rage, her

  Need for more, and now, and all.

  Let me leap from sleep if her voice

  Sounds out, afraid, from down the hall.

  I have seen men like your father

  Walking up Harrison Street

  Now that the days are getting longer.

  Let me love them as I love my own

  Father, whom I phoned once

  From a valley in my life

  To say what I feared I’d never

  Adequately said, voice choked,

  Stalled, hearing the silence spread

  Around us like weather. What

  Would it cost me to say it now,

  To a stranger’s father, walking home

  To our separate lives together?

  AN OLD STORY

  We were made to understand it would be

  Terrible. Every small want, every niggling urge,

  Every hate swollen to a kind of epic wind.

  Livid, the land, and ravaged, like a rageful

  Dream. The worst in us having taken over

  And broken the rest utterly down.

  A long age

  Passed. When at last we knew how little

  Would survive us—how little we had mended

  Or built that was not now lost—something

  Large and old awoke. And then our singing

  Brought on a different manner of weather.

  Then animals long believed gone crept down

  From trees. We took new stock of one another.

  We wept to be reminded of such color.

  NOTES

  “Hill Country” is for Bill Jo
hnson.

  “Declaration” is an erasure poem drawn from the text of the Declaration of Independence.

  “The Greatest Personal Privation” and “Unwritten” are for Nan and Erskine Clarke. Both are erasure poems drawn from correspondence between members of the Mary and Charles Colcock Jones family regarding the sale of slaves Patience, Porter, and their children, members of the Geechee/Gullah communities in Liberty County, Georgia. Early in his career as a Presbyterian minister, Jones contemplated supporting the abolition of slavery; he chose, instead, to work as a missionary and reformer in Liberty County, though he remained a slaveholder until his death in 1863. The history of the Joneses, and those enslaved on their plantations, is addressed in Erskine Clarke’s Dwelling Place: A Plantation Epic (Yale University Press, 2005).

  The text for “I Will Tell You the Truth about This, I Will Tell You All about It” is composed entirely of letters and statements of African Americans enlisted in the Civil War, and those of their wives, widows, parents, and children. While the primary documents in question have been abridged, the poem preserves the original spellings and punctuation to the extent possible throughout.

  I relied upon the following books in composing the poem:

  Regosin, Elizabeth A., and Donald R. Shaffer, eds. Voices of Emancipation: Understanding Slavery, the Civil War, and Reconstruction through the U.S. Pension Bureau Files. New York: New York University Press, 2008.

  Berlin, Ira, and Leslie S. Rowland, eds. Families and Freedom: A Documentary History of African-American Kinship in the Civil War Era. New York: The New Press, 1997.

  Once I began reading these texts, it became clear to me that the voices in question should command all of the space within my poem. I hope that they have been arranged in such a way as to highlight certain of the main factors affecting blacks during the Civil War, chiefly: the compound effects of slavery and war upon the African American family; the injustices to which black soldiers were often subject; the difficulty black soldiers and their widows faced in attempting to claim pensions after the war; and the persistence, good faith, dignity, and commitment to the ideals of democracy that ran through the many appeals to President Lincoln, the Freedmen’s Bureau, and other authorities to whom petitions were routinely addressed during and after the war. Original sources are as follows:

  November 21, 1864: Letter from Mrs. Jane Welcome to Abraham Lincoln

  September 3, 1864: Letter from Spotswood Rice to his daughters

  November 26, 1864: Affidavit of Joseph Miller

  August 12, 1865: Letter from Norman Riley to Catherine Riley

  August 25, 1864: Letter from Annie Davis to Abraham Lincoln

  August 28, 1865: Letter from Catherine Riley to Norman Riley

  December 7, 1866: Letter from Martin Lee to the head of the

  Freedmen’s Bureau in Georgia.

  March 9, 1867: Letter from Harrison Smith to his sister-in-law, Minta Smith

  The long italicized sections of the poem are compiled of numerous sources.

  Stanza by stanza within each section, they are:

  “Excellent Sir My son went in the 54th regiment—”:

  Letter from Hannah Johnson to Abraham Lincoln, July 31, 1863

  Letter from Rosanna Henson to Abraham Lincoln, July 11, 1864

  Letter from Members of the 55th Massachusetts Infantry to Abraham Lincoln, July 16, 1864

  Unsigned letter to General Sickels, Jan. 13, 1866

  Letter from Hiram A. Peterson to his father, Aaron Peterson, Oct. 24, 1863

  Letter from Hannah Johnson to Abraham Lincoln, July 31, 1863

  Unsigned letter to General Sickels, Jan. 13, 1866

  Letter from Hiram A. Peterson to Aaron Peterson, Oct. 24, 1863

  Letter from Aaron Peterson to Secretary of War, Hon. Edwin M. Stanten, Oct. 29, 1863

  Letter from James Herney to Secretary Stanten, May 15, 1866

  Letter from Hannah Johnson to Abraham Lincoln, July 31, 1863

  Letter from Hiram A. Peterson to Aaron Peterson, Oct. 24, 1863

  “I am 60 odd years of age—”:

  Deposition of Ellen Wade, Nov. 21, 1906, Civil War Pension File of Walker Bettlesworth (alias Wade), 116th USCI, RG 15

  Deposition of Thomas W. Wilbourn, Apr. 14, 1909, Civil War Pension File of Thomas Wilbert (alias Thomas W. Wilbourn), 122nd USCI, RG 15

  Deposition of Alice Bettlesworth (alias Wade), Nov. 21, 1906, Civil War Pension File of Walker Bettlesworth (alias Wade), 116th USCI, RG 15

  Deposition of Charles Franklin Crosby, June 19, 1914, Civil War Pension File of Frank Nunn (alias Charles Franklin Crosby), 86th USCI, RG 15

  Deposition of Emma Frederick, June 2, 1899, Civil War Pension file of Clement Frederick, 70th and 71st USCI, RG 15

  Deposition of Hiram Kirkland, Nov. 26, 1902, Civil War Pension File of Hiram Kirkland, 101st and 110th USCI, RG 15

  Deposition of Charles Washington, Dec. 18, 1905, Civil War Pension File of Charles Washington, 47th USCI, RG 15

  Deposition of Emma Frederick, March 12, 1903

  Deposition of Hiram Kirkland

  Deposition of Emma Frederick, Apr. 11, 1903

  Deposition of Thomas W. Wilbourn

  Deposition of Charles Washington

  Deposition of Alexander Porter, May 3, 1900, Civil War Pension File of Alexander Porter, 58th USCI, RG 15

  Deposition of Hiram Kirkland

  Deposition of Revel Garrison, Sept. 10, 1888, Civil War Pension File of Revel Garrison, 2nd USCC, RG 15

  Affidavit of Benjamin Courtney, Apr. 28, 1908, Civil War Pension File of Benjamin Courtney, 51st USCI, RG 15

  Deposition of Charles Washington

  Deposition of Robert Harrison, Apr. 11, 1890, Civil War Pension File of Robert Harris (alias Robert Harrison, alias John Wilson), RG 15

  Deposition of Robert Harrison

  Affidavit of William L. Dickerson, Oct. 23, 1902, William L. Dickinson (alias Dixon, Dickson, and Dickerson), 14th USCI, RG 15

  Deposition of Robert Harrison

  Affidavit of Hannibal Sibley, Jan. 11, 1893, Civil War Pension File of Solomon Sibley, 63rd USCI, RG 15

  Affidavit of Martin Campbell, June 10, 1889, Civil War Pension File of Dennis Campbell, 63rd USCI, RG 15

  Deposition of Louis Jourdan, May 27, 1915, Civil War Pension File of Louis Jourdan, 77th USCI and 10th USCHA, RG 15

  Deposition of Dick Lewis Barnett, May 17, 1911, Civil War Pension File of Lewis Smith (alias Dick Lewis Barnett), 77th USCI and 10th USCHA, RG 15

  Deposition of Mary Jane Taylor, May 13, 1919, Civil War Pension File of Samuel Taylor, 45th USCI, RG 15

  Deposition of Charles Franklin Crosby, June 19, 1914, Civil War Pension File of Frank Nunn (alias Charles Franklin Crosby), 86th USCI, RG 15

  Deposition of Dick Lewis Barnett

  Deposition of Hiram Kirkland

  Italicized lines in “Theatrical Improvisation” quote from and are based upon the following real-life sources:

  Reported attacks on Muslim American women in the days after the 2016 presidential election as collected by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

  Comments by Andrew Anglin: “Fear. Now is the time for it. … We want these people to feel that everything around them is against them. And we want them to be afraid,” from a November 10, 2016, post to neo-Nazi Daily Stormer website entitled “Female Hajis Fear to Wear the Headtowel in Public after Trump Win—You Should Yell at Them.”

  In 2015 fifty-eight-year-old Guillermo Rodriguez, a homeless Latino immigrant, was attacked while sleeping outside a Boston commuter rail station. One of his assailants, Scott Leader, told police the violence was acceptable because the victim was homeless and Hispanic. Reuters, May 17, 2016.

  Comments by Patrick Stein, member of an antigovernment group called the Crusaders, who was arrested after allegedly finalizing plans to blow up an apartment complex housing more than 100 Somali-born, Muslim immigrants and a small mosque: “The only fucking way this country’s ever going to get turned around is it will
be a bloodbath and it will be a nasty, messy motherfucker. Unless a lot more people in this country wake up and smell the fucking coffee and decide they want this country back … we might be too late, if they do wake up … I think we can get it done. But it ain’t going to be nothing nice about it,” United States of America, Plaintiff v. Curtis Wayne Allen, Patrick Eugene Stein, and Gavin Wayne Wright, Defendants.

  Exhibitions of artwork by refugee children from Sudan (2005) and Syria (2017).

  “Watershed” is a found poem drawn from two sources: a New York Times Magazine January 6, 2016, article by Nathaniel Rich entitled, “The Lawyer Who Became DuPont’s Worst Nightmare,” and excerpts of the narratives of survivors of near-death experiences as catalogued on www.nderf.org.

  “Eternity” is set in Beijing, China, and its environs. The poem’s penultimate section is for Yi Lei.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Grateful acknowledgment is made to the editors of the following journals, who first published versions of these poems: The Academy of American Poets’ “Poem-a-Day,” the Awl, Callaloo, Cave Wall, the Cortland Review, Harvard Review, the Nation, the New Yorker, Tin House, and TriQuarterly.

  “Garden of Eden” was the 2017 Commencement Poem of St. Francis College.

  “Realm of Shades” appears in Bearden’s Odyssey: Poets Respond to the Art of Romare Bearden (TriQuarterly Books, 2017).

  “I Will Tell You the Truth about This, I Will Tell You All about It” was written to accompany the Civil War 150th exhibition at the Smithsonian Museum’s National Portrait Gallery in 2011. It appears in the folio Lines in Long Array: A Civil War Commemoration: Poems and Photographs, Past and Present (Smithsonian Books, 2013).

  “Ghazal” was written for The Ecstasy of St. Kara: Kara Walker, New Work (The Cleveland Museum of Art, 2016).

  “New Road Station” was written for broadcast on the All Things Considered “News Poet” feature on National Public Radio.

  “Unrest in Baton Rouge” was written for broadcast on WNYC’s Studio 360.

  “Urban Youth” is for Conrad.

  “Annunciation” appears in Liverpool Presents Sgt Pepper at 50 for the city’s celebration May 25 to June 16, 2017.

 

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