892 Matching Annotations
  1. Nov 2019
    1. plastic parameters of Anglo blandness

      Anglo means a white, English-speaking American. By saying plastic parameters and Anglo- blandness, Touré may be suggesting the conformity to white society is plain, dull, and lacks any of the substance or creativity that Black culture possesses.

    2. myth

      myth- a traditional story, especially one concerning the early history of a people or explaining some natural or social phenomenon, and typically involving supernatural beings or events. Sonny Blount claimed the planet Saturn as his birthplace. He took as his motto "Space Is the Place." Thus, the constant use of space and magic imagery in the poem has to do with Sonny’s musical science fiction overtones.

    1. The Library of Congress—

      The library of Congress is a research library that officially serves the United States Congress. It is the national library of the United States. It is also located somewhat close to Gibson Plaza Apartments.

    2. Sticks

      In an interview by the Teachers and Writers Magazine, Ellis described how he had the nickname of ‘Sticks’ growing up because he was so skinny. Ellis grew up in an inner city neighborhood in Washington D.C. ‘Sayers’ is also a nickname he was given growing up. Gale Sayers was a running back for the Chicago Bears who was the “most poetic runner in the history of pro football” (https://teachersandwritersmagazine.org/loud-and-open-on-the-page-interview-with-thomas-sayers-ellis-2730.htm)

    1. What does it require?

      The questions throughout the poem suggest an attempt to understand the subject or audience’s knowledge. Editor Yolanda Page in Encyclopedia of African American Women Writers describes one of the common themes of Opal Moore’s poetry as exhibiting “the power of communication between generations” (421). In the context of this poem, that idea suggests that this may be a younger generation asking questions about the experiences of an older generation.

    2. I have never churned buttermilk

      This is the only statement in the poem. It is followed by questions that suggest images of the past and the South. Also, according to L.V. Anderson in “All Churned Around,” the poor and enslaved people drank buttermilk for its high fat and caloric content.

    3. oh. sister got bold (didn’t she?) died. changed. (didn’t she?) changed dying (didn’t she, lord. oh, didn’t she…?)

      This may indicate the attempt of the speaker to convince themselves of what they want to see in the death of “sister”

    4. She did not want to be healed by doctors when she might conduct a miracle through the hands of her preacher/man

      Some denominations of Christianity do not believe in the use of modern medicine to heal sicknesses. Instead they rely on prayer for their healing power.

    5. God/men

      The slash that separates God and man may be to emphasize the control that men have over women. In this way, Moore may be trying to show that the death was caused by man’s need to control women. Yolanda Page’s evaluation of Moore portrays this as well: “Moore’s poetry struggles between the redemptive power of Christianity and its historical repression of women’s voices” (421).

    6. Sister

      This is a prose poem divided into seven paragraph-form stanzas. The lack of pronouns before “Sister” may indicate that this is not the speaker’s sister but instead, for a fellow woman. The idea of this poem being directed to women in general is reinforced by Yolanda Page: “Moore’s uncollected published poetry, from 1985 to 1999, serves to speak women’s voices into fields where they were not welcome” (421). Yolanda Page mentions only of Moore’s dedication to amplifying the female voice, not the origins of her poetry being rooted in the experiences of specific individuals. Additionally, Moore wrote multiple poems that are collected into Lot’s Daughters which reference “sister” without a pronoun attached, such as: “A Woman’s Virtue: Sister I Need to Hear You Sing That Song” and “Benediction: His Eye is on the Sparrow.”

    7. chickenfat attentions

      Chicken fat is left over from the cooking process and is generally reused for other dishes. It is a common ingredient to add flavor. This may indicate that the speaker is calling the women’s attentions common.

    1. hoodoo

      voodoo or witchcraft; Hoodoo began as an African American religion and lost its religious status after the 1880s. Hoodoo beliefs are naturalistic and believed to be folk magic. (Ed Moorhouse (Rutgers 2013): African American Hoodoo: More Than Magic)

    2. Against the Bone

      The title may suggest fighting against some sort of force. The force could be simply the speaker's own body. The tittle could mean the speaker is fighting against her own body's wants for a sexual experience.

    3. chronicle

      a factual or written account of important or historical events in the order of their occurrence; Using the word “chronical” in this line may suggest that the poem is set up in chronological order of Osbey’s coming of age and how Nina Simone affected her at each phase of her life.

    4. we did not even say your name. we ate you like good hot bread fresh from the table of an older woman and then we tossed the rest out for the scavengers.

      These four lines may suggest how Osbey and other African Americans did not appreciate Nina Simone and her efforts. Osbey seems to be aware of her dishonor to Nina Simone and wishes more people of color were aware of how radical Nina Simone was during the Civil Rights Movement.

    5. deep violet

      This line is repeated again, but this time italicized. In this case, it may suggest that in that particular moment Nina Simone had independent agency and reminded her people of their betrayal of not honoring her.

    6. their sorry asses

      “their” could represent the people of color who did not always believe in Nina Simone’s efforts because she was a woman. African Americans also failed to represent their own people simply because of gender. Osbey may have included this line to show how ignorant it was for people to ignore such radical things Nina Simone was doing because of her gender.

    7. if your country’s full of lies if your man leaves you if your lover dies if you lose your ground and there is no higher ground if your people leave you if you got no people if your pride is hurting if you got no pride, no soul if you living in danger if you living in mississippi, baltimore, detroit if you walk right, talk right, pray right if you don’t bow down if you hungry if you old if you just don’t know

      15 lines staring with “if.” These lines may suggest a calling for African Americans to connect with these words and see where they fit in. It also makes the audience feel that they are not alone with what is happening to them. Many people of color are experiencing the same thing—discrimination.

    8. what did the woman have on?

      Here the speaker is asking specifically what Nina Simone wore when she was performing in New Orleans. This may suggest that the speaker is questioning if Nina Simone has changed since her leave in Liberia. Because Osbey mentions dashikis, afros, and cornrows, she may want the audience to understand the types of cultural things that were evident in African American’s lives including Nina Simone's.

    9. “Fodder on My Wings”

      This is the title of Nina Simone’s album. It is known as one of her best works. This is also the only phrase that is capitalized in the entire poem. This may suggest the significance of the album title it had on both the speaker and Nina Simone’s life and the immense respect Osbey has for Nina Simone, since “i” is not even capitalized.

    10. of all night long and-a where are you

      These two lines are italicized to show significance—the speaker is directly asking Nina Simone where she is. This is important because there was a time where Nina Simone did stop singing and she moved to Liberia in the mid-1970s. She moved here, disappointed by the deaths of Martin Luther King Jr and Malcom X, along with other African American artists in search of black consciousness. (Danielle Jackson: Nina Simone's Three Years of Freedom)

    11. “what the hell did living do for you girl?”

      This is a repeated question that the speaker is directly asking Nina Simone. This is italicized and in quotes representing the past when Osbey figuratively asked Nina Simone this question when she heard her on the radio.

    12. if you live right if you live right if you live right but what has living done for you?

      The italics here may suggest Osbey speaking in the present. It seems that she is literally asking Nina Simone this question. It could also be directed at African American people who conformed to the "right" way of living and forgot about their fight to gain equality.

    13. expatriate.

      a person who lives outside of their native country; Including this word in the poem may suggest how people of color felt like outcasts in America. They felt they did not belong because of the color of their skin.

    14. bow down our heads.

      This phrase could suggest that Osbey and other African Americans did not appreciate all of Nina Simone’s efforts in the Civil Rights Movement. Even though her work was very radical, she was dismissed because she was a woman.

    15. roman cigarettes

      It was very common during this time to smoke. It was part of the normal day routine to smoke cigarettes, even young teens. Including this in the poem may just suggest the rebellious side of Osbey when she was coming of age.

    16. “i have this sister, this nina. play some for my sister here, man. man, get up and put on that nina simone.”

      The italics and quotes represent that someone else is speaking. The speaker refers to Nina Simone as a “sister” which was a slang term used during the Civil Rights Movement that created a community in which they all were fighting for equal rights.

    17. “you are like women of my country”

      Osbey may have put this line in quotes to represent her own speaking but in the past. She recalls herself saying this and repeats it now realizing it was “foolish.” She now realizes how radical Nina Simone was but not taken seriously due to her being a woman.

    18. “you will be old one day, sister. then you will sleep fine.”

      The italics and quotes represent that someone new is speaking. In this case, this quote may suggest that Osbey recalls a specific conversation in which someone gives her this advice.

    19. cameroun or ivory coast senegal, algeria, panama, martinique,

      None of these places are capitalized, however, they are all significant because the Civil Rights Movement is not just a fight in America, but a fight all across the world. People of color are struggling globally to be seen as equals and Osbey recognizes that in this poem.

    20. deep violet deep violet

      Repetition of these lines may emphasize the significance of the color violet and the meaning behind it—being spiritual and imaginative or the struggles of coming of age as a African American woman.

    21. we thought we understood it all.

      It is very common for young people to believe that they do know it all. Adding this line may suggest that Osbey is remembering times where she may have not appreciated all of what Nina Simone and other civil rights activists were doing to gain equality.

    22. cornrow

      This is another type of hairstyle traditionally worn by people of color. Adding this word in the poem further shows the culture of African Americans that Osbey is trying to portray; the idea that people of color should be proud of their true blackness and embrace all of their culture.

    23. “soul sister number 1” “soul sister number 2”

      Because these two lines are in quotations but not italicized, it could infer that Osbey is recalling a time where she herself was speaking. When she was a younger girl, this is how she roll-called her friends and including this in the poem may suggest how important she thought of her friends, since she referred to them as “soul sisters.” In addition, Nina Simone helped signify the term “soul” as a “flexible yet powerful marker of black identity.” (Emily J. Lordi (2016) Souls Intact)

    24. slapped hands on our hips and the slightest provocation, and learned when and when not to apologize for it. two brown girls acting out,

      Women of color were being sexualized constantly during this time, so young girls had to learn the difference between when they were going too far or just having fun. Their appearance and reputation mattered more than women of noncolor.

    25. dashikis and afros

      Dashikis are loose, colorful, vibrant shirts originally from West Africa. Afros are a type of hairstyle that people of color wore often. Having these styles in the poem may suggest that Osbey is trying to paint a picture in the reader’s mind of what people of color may have looked like or dressed like during these time periods. This shows their culture and their true blackness.

    26. “you two know so much, want to be so grown and everything, need to quit all that giggling and learn to listen to nina.”

      These four lines are italicized to show someone different is talking. The new speaker, Osbey recalls from a past conversation, seems to be telling the girls (Osbey’s younger self) to stop worrying about their looks and boys and listen to Nina Simone’s music which brings light to the Civil Rights Movement and their fight for equality.

    27. we were all the evening news

      "we” can mean African American people and the narrator is suggesting that Nina Simone being on the evening news means that she had to do something big that would attract such notice. She played a huge role in the Civil Rights Movement, therefore, when Osbey says “we were on the evening news” it could suggest that Nina Simone represents the entire African American community.

    28. “sister” “brother” “people” “power”

      These phrases are slang words used by African Americans during the Civil Rights Movement. Including them in the poem may suggest that there was a sense of family or community of people of color all fighting for their rights.

    29. i

      Osbey does not capitalize any of the “i’s.” This may suggest that she is not very self-absorbed with her thoughts, but more concerned with trying to portray Nina Simone’s thoughts or puts Nina Simone at a much higher stance that she may believe her own self of “i” is not as significant.

    30. “i disremember”

      fail to remember it; The phrase “i disremember” is italicized and in quotations which could represent a new speaker. This speaker could perhaps be an audience member of one of Nina Simone’s performances and does not remember the reasoning behind her singing and simply just enjoyed the entertainment aspect.

    31. new orleans

      Brenda Marie Osbey does not capitalize New Orleans, but this is one of the many cities where the Civil Rights Movement was very active. Because Nina Simone was apart of this movement, including this setting might suggest that she was a participant in events in New Orleans. It is also important to note that Osbey grew up in New Orleans.

    32. deep violet

      The color violet represents imagination and spirituality. It creates a balance of the physical and spiritual energies within someone. Violet assists those seeking the meaning of life and spiritual fulfillment. It could also represent the fictional novel The Color Purple, written by Alice Walker, that describes the coming of age of a young African American girl who is abused and raped by her own father. This may suggest some of the struggles young African American people go through because of their color.

    33. Nina Simone

      (1933-2003); Nina Simone is known as an author, civil rights activist, singer and pianist. She was a legendary jazz, blues and folk performer and trained at Julliard School of Music. Nina Simone is her stage name and her performances won over fans such as Langston Hughes, Lorraine Hansberry, and James Baldwin. In the mid-1960s she became the voice of the Civil Rights Movement, writing a song titled "Mississippi Goddamn" in response to the Birmingham church bombing that killed four young African American girls. She settled down in France and struggled with severe mental health issues. Nina Simone died at the age of 70 from breast cancer on April 21, 2003 at her home in France.

    1. sacristy

      a room in a church where a priest prepares for a service, and where vestments and other things used in worship are kept. Being next to organic and abode may suggest the mothers pregnant belly is a natural 'sacred room' or 'abode' for the baby

    2. In rhythm with life rhythms without metronomes

      The poem is written with a sort of rhythm, but not a regular or structured rhythm. So, this line may be referring to the irregular beat of the poem and reflecting the irregular structure of life's "rhythm."

    1. lynched phoenix salutes your legend.

      Phoenixes are mythological birds that cyclically regenerate or are otherwise resurrected/born again. A phoenix obtains its new life by arising from the ashes of its predecessor. The phoenix imagery of rebirth/resurrection after death brings to mind the death and resurrection of Jesus. This line may suggest that Till is included as a martyr, and/or a Christ-like figure such as those who have died before Till because of an unjust cause such as racism towards African Americans. Those who have been "martyred" before him for the sake of equality honor his death and the legend he will leave behind him.

    2. leave no ashes

      Unlike the mythological phoenix, Till and other murdered African Americans cannot be reborn, and thus, they do not leave ashes. However, the following two lines suggest that while the physical people cannot be resurrected, their deaths have produced an honorable legend that will live on forever.

    3. star/trail

      “Star” may be alluding to the slave folklore that says that the North Star was crucially important in helping slaves escape to the north. Additionally, “trail” may also allude to the Underground Railroad, through which abolitionist and former slave Harriet Tubman led slaves to freedom.

    4. Lions

      In a traditional African American folktale, a boy is confused by every story he reads, in which the lion, the king of the jungle, is always defeated by the man. The boy’s father explains to him that the lion will always be conquered until he can tell his own story.

    5. brooms complain of being misused as instruments of a slave-jumping point

      The practice of jumping over a broomstick sufficed as a public marriage ceremony among slaves in the 1840s and 1850s as they were usually not permitted to marry legally. This practice is still used in some African American communities.

    6. arrivals

      Since the subject of this poem dies, the “arrival” could be the arrival through death to Heaven after having gone through an extreme challenge grounded in racism. Throughout the poem, several different challenges that African Americans have faced are recalled, such as needing to create a symbolic covenant of marriage, escaping slavery through the Underground Railroad, and lynchings.

    7. 55

      The possible subject of this poem,Emmett Till, was lynched at the age of 14 in 1955 for supposedly sexually harassing a married white woman. Till became a symbol for the Civil Rights Movement following his death. The white woman who accused Till admitted years later that she fabricated the story.

    8. ceiling of language, a storm-verbed sky

      This could allude to the fact that very little people speak about minor (and sometimes even major) oil spills and other kinds of pollution, and therefore, language (speaking about these events) is constricted by a metaphorical ceiling.

    9. boat-tossed face

      This could refer to two things, or both at once. The first option is that the speaker has literally been on a boat while the water was filled with oil and became seasick. The second option is that seeing all of the oil and damage to the Gulf made the speaker feel sick, thus referencing a “boat-tossed face.”

    10. miracle spread

      Miracle spread is an alternative fatty spread (similar to butter) consistent of different oils popular in Australia. This adds on to the “breadbrown slice of careless nature,” as miracle spread is used on bread or toast as a butter substitute. It also adds to the satirical, eco-critical tone of the poem in which the oil spill is metaphorically visualized through several food references. The beaches are “awaiting” the arrival of the oil from the spill. It is referenced as a “gift” sarcastically.

    11. rises as wrecked richness to surface

      Veracity, or truth, “rises” to the “surface” just as the marine wildlife such as sea turtles and fish will rise to the surface of the water after being killed by the contamination of the oil spill.

    12. Veracity

      (noun): conformity with truth or fact. “Veracity” may indicate that the prior “theory” of the oil spill is no longer valid as there will one day be concrete evidence of pollution, as oil will eventually wash up on the shore of the coasts.

    13. housed in theory

      “Housed in theory” may allude to the lack of knowledge or care for the small, everyday oil spills. Only large oil spills like 2010’s BP (Deepwater Horizon) Oil Spill are televised and announced. Many people also believe that global warming and pollution are not a huge danger for the Earth, so “housed in theory” could be satirically calling out those people who are skeptical.

    14. oilwater

      There have been numerous oil spills that have affected the Gulf of Mexico as well as the Mississippi River. As there are no oil spills named specifically, Jerry Ward Jr. may be referring to the constant toxification of the Gulf by runoff and small leaks that occur continuously and go largely unnoticed. He may be trying to raise awareness about the small yet still significant destruction of nature that people are unconscious of or apathetic towards.

    15. fish ignore with beautiful indifference

      “Beautiful indifference” represents the purity of fish. They “ignore” the oil that is going to cause their deaths because they are unaware of its existence and its harmful effects. They, unlike humans, are unable to prevent damaging occurrences such as oil spills from happening.

    16. butter

      Butter or butter-like substances consist of various oils. This reference to butter may aid the reader in visualizing what this oil might look or feel like. It also assists in completing the image of churning butter as a metaphor for the oil in the Gulf of Mexico.

    17. churn

      A churn is a machine or container in which butter (a thick substance) is made by agitating and breaking apart fatty molecules. This is a tiring process when completed by hand because of the vigorous effort required to churn thick substances. This image of churning the water allows the reader to recognize how much oil must have been in the water and its effect on the water’s consistency.

    1. the general

      Whereas Trujillo is referred to as "El General" in the first part of the poem, he is referred to as "the general" in the second part of the poem. This reinforces the sense that the two parts of the poem represent different ethnic or global perspectives.

  2. May 2019
    1. Like Miles Said

      "Miles" refers to Miles Davis (1926-1991), a famous African American trumpeter, who is among the most influential and acclaimed figures in the history of jazz. He adopted a variety of musical directions in his five-decade career that kept him at the forefront of many major stylistic developments--from be-bop and hard bop to electric jazz and jazz fusion.

  3. Apr 2019
    1. Peggy in Killing

      Kendrick wrote this poem after researching Margaret Garner, a slave who attempted to escape with her husband and children. Her story also inspired Toni Morrison's Beloved and an opera called Margaret Garner.

    2. We be sold, but we ain’t bought.

      It seems that, in the end, Hattie and Carrie are sold together. Hattie says "we ain't bought" because through her prayer and conversation with Carrie they refused to succumb to their own acceptance of slavery. They have not "bought in".

    3. My, your forehead be hot, fever comin’ on I ‘spect, an’ your mother’s fever gone cold makin’ it more dangerous when it be exposed to the elements

      It seems that this is one of Carrie's first experiences on the auction block; she's crying and nervous while Hattie knows what's going on. Kendrick may be describing Carrie's discomfort as the fever coming onto her, in addition to her possibly feeling sick in the moment. In contrast, Hattie is no stranger to the ills of slavery and is used to this public display of inhumanity; her "fever's gone cold". However, Carrie's anguish seems to have reignited an anger in Hattie that she hasn't had in some time, and she is well aware that, "exposed to the elements/ that gather up 'round her now," she must control herself. So, her words to her daughter are also a way for Hattie to keep herself calm.

    4. I cain’t leave this block in holo-cust!

      Kendrick's use of enjambment here layers the meaning of these two lines. Hattie cannot leave the auction block in either the present or the foreseeable future. If she decided to run, she would surely be abused and likely separated from her child. In the second line, the hyphenated word "holo-cust" is clearly a play on the word holocaust—meaning a mass slaughter of people--used most commonly in reference to the Holocaust, the genocide of millions of Jewish people by Nazi Germany from 1941-1945. Kendrick seems to be likening the mass abduction, abuse, and even murder of millions of African Americans from the 1600s to the 1800s. However, the word "holo-cust" has a meaning of its own. The Greek word "holo" means entire, total, or complete, while the word "cust" likely refers to the Latin word "custos" which means guardian or oversight. When put together, the word holo-cust means something along the lines of total guardianship. This is the role Hattie takes on the auction block as Carrie's mother. However, when the two lines are read together, Kendrick comments on the compromising position that enslaved parents were forced into.

    5. unleavened.

      Unleavened refers to bread or baked goods made without 'leavening agents' that would cause it to rise while being baked. The result is a flatter good like biscuits or tortillas. This may also be a biblical allusion. When Moses helped the Jews escape slavery in Egypt, they didn't have time to let their bread rise, so they ate unleavened bread. Jewish people eat unleavened bread at Passover year to commemorate their escape from bondage.

    6. not a human bein’ like all you

      Hattie, the enslaved mother, seems to be well aware of her humanity and the fact that whites, specifically white slave owners, believe her to be simply property. This echoes W.E.B. DuBois' concept of "double consciousness."

    1. silver skin

      The word or phrase "silver skin" has two meanings, both related to food. The first refers to a thin papery layer that surrounds a coffee bean immediately inside the parchment. The second meaning is the thin, sinewy connective tissue on meats. The skin here seems to be referring both to a skin around the genitalia and around the mind. In both, actual sensation or orgasm is being blocked by this 'skin' of wondering.

    1. Brazil, in Nigeria, Ghana, in Botswana, Tanzania, in Kenya, in Russia, Australia, in Haiti, Soweto, in Grenada, in Cuba, in Panama, Libya in England and Italy, France. We are graces in any places. I

      Black people are in every part of the globe, there is a unity in that which is divided by the term "African-American"

    2. Blacks

      the repetition of the harsh syllables and consonants put the word right in your face to make you uncomfortable but also to see that the word has power and that it isn't the negativity that has historically been placed on it.

    3. African-American

      Commentary on how "African-American" is seen as politically correct. The term can be seen as negative for many reasons including that it infers that they are hyphenated Americans, or not fully American

    1. Agosta the Winged Man and Rasha the Black Dove

      In her intro to the poem at the 1994 conference, Dove explains that the inspiration for this poem is a painting by 1920s German painter Christian Schad. The painting is a portrait of a Black woman from Madagascar and a white man with a physical deformity in which he appeared to have wings under his body. The two appeared in a freak show together in Berlin in 1929; the woman being in the show simply because it was so unusual to see a Black person in Germany at the time, having no physical peculiarities. This poem is ekphrastic, or based on art.

      From the Tate Museum of Art: "Agosta, the Pigeon-Chested Man, and Rasha, the Black Dove (1929) is a large portrait-oriented oil painting that features a white man (Agosta) on a decorative high-backed chair that is reminiscent of a throne. He is naked aside from a black and white robe that is swathed around his lower half, and he turns slightly to his right in an upright position that emphasises his unusually prominent ribcage. The man has a confident, almost arrogant expression, and stares down towards the viewer. Positioned in front of him at his feet is a black woman, Rasha, visible from the chest upwards, who wears a red and white halter-neck top. She is shown frontally and gazes impassively at the viewer."

      Elizabeth Alexander wrote a similar poem entitled "The Venus Hottentot" that parallels the theme of looking at historical figures with a modern perspective.

    2. 2. The Palace

      The form of part 2 is free verse. There is also a point of view change here. Part 2 is from the point of view of El General.

      El General's mother, who is discussed more in part two, was of Haitian descent. This alludes to the fact that El General connected the killing of the Haitians with somehow defending or covering up his mother's heritage.

    3. Katalina.

      This could be the name of El General's mother. As scholar Therese Steffen and Hubert Fichte note, the "l" in Katalina is also significant because it highlights the failure of even the Spanish to say their Rs: "since the days of the Conquistadores the master language Spanish itself would replace an "R" with an "L" and produce "Katalina" for "Katharina"" (english.illinois.edu).

    4. 1. The Cane Fields

      The form of part 1 is an unrhyming villanelle, a nineteen-line poem consisting of five tercets followed by a quatrain. There are two refrains, with the first and third line of the first tercet repeated alternately until the last stanza, which includes both repeated lines.

    1. To BUILD black schools To BUILD black children To BUILD black minds To BUILD black love To BUILD black impregnability To BUILD a strong black nation

      The Black Aesthetic is a cultural ideology that developed in America alongside the Civil Rights movement in the 1960s and promoted Black separatism in the arts.The theorist Larry Neal proclaimed in 1968, that the Black arts were the "aesthetic and spiritual sister of the Black Power concept." The development of a Black Aesthetic was crucial to the development of an African-American identity at this revolutionary moment in American politics.

    1. Can't you see what love and heartache's done to me I'm not the same as I used to be this is my last affair

      Throughout the poem, the tone of the refrain shifts from the romantic nostalgia of the original lyric to the tragedy and racial trauma of Bessie's death.

    2. 'nother n***** dead 'fore noon

      Here, there is a stark contrast between this voice and the voice of the poem—the voice of the poem eulogizes Bessie as a music hero, this one both writes her off and kills her off using this racial slur.

    3. arm torn out

      In reference to the automobile accident that led to the death of Bessie Smith. Her arm was torn from her body and she was bleeding profusely, but could not receive proper medical treatment in time due to the fact that the closest hospital to the accident would not accept African American patients.

    1. I Can Never Unlove You

      Redmond lists two people as sources of inspiration for this poem: famous playwright William Shakespeare and American singer William "Smokey" Robinson. Smokey Robinson was the founder, lead, songwriter, and producer for the popular Motown vocal group The Miracles. He would eventually go solo in 1973 while spending more time as the vice president of Motown Records. Robinson was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987.

    2. grains

      Redmond's references to rice throughout the poem– "rice-thin", "rice wine", and "grains" here– may be included to remind the reader that My Lai was a small agricultural village with a population of mostly farmers.

    3. unregenerative crops trigger-grown from the trunks of branchless mechanical trees.

      Redmond refers to American armaments as "branchless / mechanical trees" and the villagers massacred by those arms as "unregenerative crops" which have died and will never live again. Redmond's plant imagery here may also refer to Agent Orange, which was a deadly chemical herbicide dropped by American aircraft during the war in order to poison people and their food supplies. The use of Agent Orange during the Vietnam War was part of a strategic war program called "Operation Ranch Hand."

    1. that some dark child In time to come might pass this way and, in This clearing, read and know.

      Aubert summarizes his ultimate purpose in writing a poem about Nat Turner, to educate those who may not know of his sacrifice and give "some dark child" a sense of history and heroism.

    2. Soon to be rushed to dying glow by the Indifferent winds of miscarriage

      After the rebellion, Nat Turner was sentenced to death by public hanging. Aubert contemplates how Turner’s fire was, “rushed to dying glow” and how the winds might be indifferent to the “miscarriage” of justice.

    1. open arms saying, I forgive you, all.

      The ending line suggests the speaker is dreaming of forgiveness and acceptance, regardless of what she achieves. However, the ending is somewhat ambiguous. Initially, the "I forgive you" seems to be coming from the "open arms," which could be her dream for her family to forgive her or accept her for being "lazy." However, the line ends with a comma and an "all," which implies that it is not her that needs forgiveness from her family but her family that needs forgiveness from her. She could possibly still have resentment towards her family for the pressure she faced in her childhood. Regardless of the interpretation, this is only happening in her "sleep," which suggests this sense of community, forgiveness, and acceptance has not been reached in her life.

    2. To think, in childhood I missed only one day of school per year. I went to ballet class four days a week at four-forty-five and on Saturdays

      Here, there is a shift as Elizabeth Alexander looks back on her childhood. She had a very taxing schedule as a child, both mentally and physically, which contrasts to the previous stanza of adulthood written in the present tense.

    1. 6 They imitate conversation by lying.

      When Baraka read this poem at the conference, he sang, using each stanza as an interjection in the song. These interjections in the music are similar to when you're in a crowded area and pick up little pieces of people's conversations.

    2. 3 They are the oldest continuously functioning Serial Killers!

      In his "Expressive Language" essay, Baraka writes, "For instance, when the first Africans were brought into the New World, it was thought that it was all right for them to be slaves because “they were heathens.”

    3. Heathens

      Baraka published a book of poems called "S O S: Poems 1961-2013" where he has more "Heathen" poems, with titles such as "Heathens in Evolution," "Heathen Bliss," "Heathen Technology & Media," and "Heathens Think Fascism is Civilization." In these poems, Baraka uses the term "heathen" similarly to how he does here, with it criticizing whites.