Author: A. Long
OFF PAGE Presents What Is Poetry Slam
The OFF PAGE vlog with Kuya David discusses “What is Poetry Slam,” and how we can all get involved!
Untitled Cove
cold salt sinks into brown skin
babies laugh, and fall in
the sun perches on top of fat clouds
sinking
blink back the heat from the shade
barbecue and merengue
drift with the wind
high tide begins
angrily
the waves crash into the cove
An Old Woman Remembers
This poem tells a story of the 1906 Atlanta riots.
Her eyes were gentle, her voice was for soft singing
In the stiff-backed pew, or on the porch when evening
Comes slowly over Atlanta. But she remembered.
She said: “After they cleaned out the saloons and the dives
The drunks and the loafers, the thought that they had better
Clean out the rest of us. And it was awful.
They snatched men off of streetcars, beat up women.
Some of our men fought back and killed, too. Still
It wasn’t their habit. And then the orders came
For the milishy, and the mob went home,
And dressed up in their soldiers’ uniforms,
And rushed back shooting just as wild as ever.
Some leaders told us to keep faith in the law,
In the governor; some did not keep that faith,
Some never had it; he was white, too, and the time
Was near election, and the rebs were mad.
He wasn’t stopping hornets with his head bare.
The white folks at the big houses, some of them
Kept all their servants home under protection
But that was all the trouble they could stand.
And some were put out when their cooks and yard-boys
Were thrown from cars and beaten, and came late or not at all.
And the police they helped the mob, and the milishy
They helped the police. And it got worse and worse.
“They broke into groceries, drugstores, barbershops,
it made no difference whether white or black.
They beat a lame bootblack until he died,
They cut an old man open with jackknives
The newspapers named us black brutes and mad dogs.
So they used a gun butt on the president
Of our seminary where a lot of folks
Had set up praying prayers the whole night through.
And then, “she said, “our folks got sick and tired
Of being chased and beaten and shot down.
All of a sudden, one day, they all got sick and tired
The servants they put down their mops and pans
And brooms and hoes and rakes and coachman whips,
Bad niggers stopped their drinking Dago red,
Good Negroes figured they had prayed enough,
All came back home–they had been too long away–
A lot of visitors had been looking for them.
They sat on their front stoops and in their yards,
Not talking much, but ready; their welcome ready:
Their shotguns oiled and loaded on their knees.
“And then
There wasn’t any riot anymore.”
by Sterling Brown
Taurus
the breathe
is fire in the belly
the soul
nurture
fill your lungs with the flame of desire
hurl hesitation on the pyre
and jump into the arms of lovers
holdfast to dreams
discover
an inner torch
can burn
and breath
finer
The Question Mark
Poor thing. Poor crippled measure of
punctuation. Who would know,
who could imagine you used to be
an exclamation point?
What force bent you over?
Age, time and the vices
of this century?
Did you not once evoke,
call out and stress?
But you got weary of it all,
got wise and turned like this.
by Gevorg Emin, Armenia
Again
mangle my name in your mouth
choke on each syllable
tangled
as the curls in my hair
thick
as the fated course we’re on
destiny is a four lettered word
that you can’t pronounce
Go home
repatriate yourself
swim in the bowels of the womb
that birthed you
and
make yourself new
learn a love, cut it up, bake it
into your grin
like cinnamon
blend
then
tell me
my name again
–A. Long
Why People Need Poetry With Stephen Burt
” ‘We’re all going to die — and poems can help us live with that.’ In a charming and funny talk, literary critic Stephen Burt takes us on a lyrical journey with some of his favorite poets, all the way down to a line break…
Crossing New Mexico with Weldon Kees

