The Last Words of Trayvon Martin As Told By His Girlfriend A Found Poem   He said this man was watching him. So he put his hoodie on, said he lost the man. I asked Trayvon to run, and he said he was going to walk fast, I told him to RUN but he said  he was  not going to run.   Trayvon said,  What are you following me for? and the man said   What are you doing here?   Next thing I hear is somebody pushing and somebody push Trayvon   because the headset just fell.   I called him again and he didn’t answer the phone.   (Source: Yahoo!)

The Last Words of Trayvon Martin As Told By His Girlfriend

A Found Poem

 

He said

this man was watching him.

So he put his hoodie on,

said he lost the man.

I asked Trayvon to run,

and he said

he was going to walk

fast,

I told him to

RUN

but he said  he was  not going to run.

 

Trayvon said,  What are you following me for?

and the man said

 

What are you doing here?

 

Next thing I hear is somebody

pushing

and

somebody push

Trayvon

 

because the headset

just fell.

 

I called him again and he

didn’t

answer

the

phone.

 

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(Source: Yahoo!)

Sonia Sanchez is Philly’s Poet Laureate. 
(via Sonia Sanchez becomes Philly’s first poet laureate - phillyBurbs.com : Book Checked)
“When the specific gravity of certain poems becomes too much to bear, I start spreading poems them out on the floor. I walk among them, I talk to them: “Where do you want to be? Why are you sitting out there all alone — too good to fraternize, or are you shy, do you need someone to hold your hand?” I sing to them, listen for answers.”
(via a tweet from @blackstudies; Direct Link in the Source)
“On a good night, I may work on up to seven poems, each in a different stage toward completion. These drafts are stored in colored folders; finished poems go into a black spring-back binder.) Gradually, certain poems beg to be together. It’s like I can feel them searching for their tribe. When the specific gravity of certain poems becomes too much to bear, I start spreading poems them out on the floor. I walk among them, I talk to them: “Where do you want to be? Why are you sitting out there all alone — too good to fraternize, or are you shy, do you need someone to hold your hand?” I sing to them, listen for answers. It can get pretty crazy; I make sure no one sees me doing this, not even my husband.”
Aggregate: A Blues Poem muselady11: He’s just hopped off the train In Houston, twisting an ankle on the way. Left dried up dirt and family In Georgia to plant a new life In the city. Sounds like steam escaping, But it’s just cars, rail cars, Filling up with aggregate— Pebbles pouring in shifts To fill a city with concrete and steel. He can hear the land screaming, Until the pebbles bury it In sterile silence While the trees die And the train whistle moans. He’ll bring the wife and kids along, When something like work turns up, But in the meantime, he looks for Leftover trees that the bulldozers Leave, to shelter him from The starless night. In Georgia, a handful of dirt Was blown out of his hands By the hot wind. In Houston, a handful of dirt Is scraped into artificial hills Only to be lost to landfills. He smells leftover life of cows Whose ghosts can be heard mooing At midnight among the loading docks. Hot house trees bring human order Out of the old green chaos, Until the ornamentals wither in the heat. He notices the wilt As he walks into his first day’s work In the new concrete warehouse. Joanne and Matt Sprott 11/2007 (Source: ladyscript.blogspot.com, via muselady11-deactivated20110905)

Aggregate: A Blues Poem

muselady11:

He’s just hopped off the train
In Houston, twisting an ankle on the way.
Left dried up dirt and family
In Georgia to plant a new life
In the city.

Sounds like steam escaping,
But it’s just cars, rail cars,
Filling up with aggregate—
Pebbles pouring in shifts
To fill a city with concrete and steel.

He can hear the land screaming,
Until the pebbles bury it
In sterile silence
While the trees die
And the train whistle moans.

He’ll bring the wife and kids along,
When something like work turns up,
But in the meantime, he looks for
Leftover trees that the bulldozers
Leave, to shelter him from
The starless night.

In Georgia, a handful of dirt
Was blown out of his hands
By the hot wind.

In Houston, a handful of dirt
Is scraped into artificial hills
Only to be lost to landfills.

He smells leftover life of cows
Whose ghosts can be heard mooing
At midnight among the loading docks.

Hot house trees bring human order
Out of the old green chaos,
Until the ornamentals wither in the heat.

He notices the wilt
As he walks into his first day’s work
In the new concrete warehouse.

Joanne and Matt Sprott
11/2007

(Source: ladyscript.blogspot.com, via muselady11-deactivated20110905)

American Justice American Justice for Oscar Grant eye for an eye tooth for a tooth a nigga and a cop a badge and a noose watch out nigga cop points and shoots he’ll kill you dead they’ll let him loose

American Justice

American Justice

for Oscar Grant

eye for an eye
tooth for a tooth
a nigga and a cop
a badge and a noose

watch out nigga
cop points and shoots
he’ll kill you dead
they’ll let him loose


“O Sylvia, Sylvia, with a dead box of stones and spoons, with two children, two meteors wandering loose in a tiny playroom, with your mouth into the sheet, into the roofbeam, into the dumb prayer, (Sylvia, Sylvia where did you go after you wrote me from Devonshire about rasing potatoes and keeping bees?) what did you stand by, just how did you lie down into? Thief! — how did you crawl into, crawl down alone into the death I wanted so badly and for so long, the death we said we both outgrew, the one we wore on our skinny breasts, the one we talked of so often each time we downed three extra dry martinis in Boston, the death that talked of analysts and cures, the death that talked like brides with plots, the death we drank to, the motives and the quiet deed? (In Boston the dying ride in cabs, yes death again, that ride home with our boy.) O Sylvia, I remember the sleepy drummer who beat on our eyes with an old story, how we wanted to let him come like a sadist or a New York fairy to do his job, a necessity, a window in a wall or a crib, and since that time he waited under our heart, our cupboard, and I see now that we store him up year after year, old suicides and I know at the news of your death a terrible taste for it, like salt, (And me, me too. And now, Sylvia, you again with death again, that ride home with our boy.) And I say only with my arms stretched out into that stone place, what is your death but an old belonging, a mole that fell out of one of your poems? (O friend, while the moon’s bad, and the king’s gone, and the queen’s at her wit’s end the bar fly ought to sing!) O tiny mother, you too! O funny duchess! O blonde thing!”
Aiyana Aiyana How did your seven-year-old body creep its way into our collective consciousness? Girls die everyday. Black girls But you force us to face the questions we all fear. What is the value of a Black girl body? Who prizes it? her? How many Black bodies will crumble in front of badges? How many more blues songs for our girl-bodies? Who, will protect us? I probably shouldn’t do this - cross-polinate my poetry  with my tumblr.  It’s 4 am and I’m still awake, so I will. And if you wanna hear it, go here Yesterday’s Poem: Aiyana

Aiyana

Aiyana

How did your seven-year-old body
creep its way
into our collective consciousness?

Girls die everyday.

Black girls

But you force us to face
the questions we all fear.

What is the value of a
Black girl body?

Who prizes it? her?

How many Black bodies
will crumble
in front of badges?

How many more blues songs
for our girl-bodies?

Who, will protect us?

I probably shouldn’t do this - cross-polinate my poetry  with my tumblr.  It’s 4 am and I’m still awake, so I will.

And if you wanna hear it, go here Yesterday’s Poem: Aiyana