Posts tagged: death

from “kwa mama zetu waliotuzaa”

and i. what dreams had i suspended
above our short order lives
when death covered you with bells.
     call her back for me
     bells. call back this memory
     still fresh with cactus pain.

(Sonia Sanchez) 

from “The Women Gather”

the women gather
with cloth and ointment
their busy hands bowing to laws that decree
willows shall stand swaying but unbroken
against even the determined wind of death

(Nikki Giovanni) 

I mourn the loss of thousands of precious lives, but I will not rejoice in the death of one, not even an enemy. Returning hate for hate only multiplies hate, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.
Martin Luther King, Jr.
from “Vesta’s Father”

            I say there is no shame
in lying among Lutherans where folks are allowed
to put flowers on graves, his plot in plain view
of those mountains that rise dark and silent
as old Mennonites standing in pews—-
black-stockinged women on one side,
black-suited men on the other—-
those mountains so high they slow the sunrise
and hurry the night.

(julia kasdorf) 

Parable

There was a saint once,
he had but to ring across
water a small bell, all

manner of fish
rose, as answer, he was
that holy, persuasive,

both, or the fish
perhaps merely
hungry, their bodies

a-shimmer with
that hope especially that
hunger brings, whatever

the reason, the fish
coming unassigned, in
schools coming

into the saint’s hand and,
instead of getting,
becoming food. 

I have thought, since, of
your body—-as I first came
to know it, how it still

can be, with mine,
sometimes. I think on
that immediate and last gesture

of the fish leaving water
for flesh, for guarantee
they will die, and I cannot 

rest on what to call it.
Not generosity, or
a blindness, trust, brute

stupidity. Not the soul
distracted from its natural
prayer, which is attention,

for in the story they are
paying attention. They
lose themselves eyes open.

(carl phillips)