Dudley Randall

–Online Poems Essay, Research Paper


The Profile on the Pillow


After our fierce loving


in the brief time we found to be together,


you lay in the half light


exhausted, rich,


with your face turned sideways on the pillow


and I traced the exquisite


line of your profile, dark against the white,


delicate and lovely as a child’s.


Perhaps


you will cease to love me.


or we may be consumed in the holocaust,


but I keep, against the ice and the fire,


the memory of your profile on the pillow.


Reprinted courtesy of Lotus Press. Online


Source


"Booker T. and W.E.B."


"It seems to me," said Booker T.,


"It shows a mighty lot of cheek


To study chemistry and Greek


When Mister Charlie needs a hand


To hoe the cotton on his land,


And when Miss Ann looks for a cook,


Why stick your nose inside a book?"


"I don’t agree," said W.E.B.,


"If I should have the drive to seek


Knowledge of chemistry or Greek,


I’ll do it. Charles and Miss can look


Another place for hand or cook.


Some men rejoice in skill of hand,


And some in cultivating land,


But there are others who maintain


The right to cultivate the brain."


"It seems to me," said Booker T.,


"That all you folks have missed the


boat


Who shout about the right to vote,


And spend vain days and sleepless


nights


In uproar over civil rights.


Just keep your mouths shut, do not


grouse,


But work, and save, and buy a house."


"I don’t agree," said W.E.B.,


"For what can property avail


If dignity and justice fail.


Unless you help to make the laws,


They’ll steal your house with


trumped-up clause.


A rope’s as tight, a fire as hot,


No matter how much cash you’ve got.


Speak soft, and try your little plan,


But as for me, I’ll be a man."


"It seems to me," said Booker T. —


"I don’t agree,"


Said W.E.B.


Courtesy of Broadside Press. Online


Source


A Poet Is Not a Jukebox


A poet is not a jukebox, so don’t tell me what to write.


I read a dear friend a poem about love, and she said,


“You’re in to that bag now, for whatever it’s worth,


But why don’t you write about the riot in Miami?”


I didn’t write about Miami because I didn’t know about Miami.


I’ve been so busy working for the Census, and listening to music all night,


and making new poems


That I’ve broken my h

abit of watching TV and reading newspapers.


So it wasn’t absence of Black Pride that caused me not to write about Miami,


But simple ignorance.


Telling a Black poet what he ought to write


Is like some Commissar of Culture in Russia telling a poet


He’d better write about the new steel furnaces in the Novobigorsk region,


Or the heroic feats of Soviet labor in digging the trans-Caucausus Canal,


Or the unprecedented achievement of workers in the sugar beet industry


who exceeded their quota by 400 percent (it was later discovered to


be a typist’s error).


Maybe the Russian poet is watching his mother die of cancer,


Or is bleeding from an unhappy love affair,


Or is bursting with happiness and wants to sing of wine, roses, and nightingales.


I’ll bet that in a hundred years the poems the Russian people will read, sing and


love


Will be the poems about his mother’s death, his unfaithful mistress, or his


wine, roses and nightingales,


Not the poems about steel furnaces, the trans-Caucasus Canal, or the sugar


beet industry.


A poet writes about what he feels, what agitates his heart and sets his pen in motion.


Not what some apparatchnik dictates, to promote his own career or theories.


Yeah, maybe I’ll write about Miami, as I wrote about Birmingham,


But it’ll be because I want to write about Miami, not because somebody


says I ought to.


Yeah, I write about love. What’s wrong with love?


If we had more loving, we’d have more Black babies to become Black brothers and


sisters and build the Black family.


When people love, they bathe with sweet-smelling soap, splash their bodies


with perfume or cologne,


Shave, and comb their hair, and put on gleaming silken garments,


Speak softly and kindly and study their beloved to anticipate and satisfy her


every desire.


After loving they’re relaxed and happy and friends with all the world.


What’s wrong with love, beauty, joy and peace?


If Josephine had given Napoleon more loving, he wouldn’t have sown the


meadows of Europe with skulls.


If Hitler had been happy in love, he wouldn’t have baked people in ovens.


So don’t tell me it’s trivial and a cop-out to write about love and not about


Miami.


A poet is not a jukebok.


A poet is not a jukebox.


I repeat, A poet is not a jukebox for someone to shove a quarter in his ear


and get the tune they want to hear,


Or to pat on the head and call “a good little Revolutionary,”


Or to give a Kuumba Liberation Award.


A poet is not a jukebox.


A poet is not a jukebox.


A poet is not a jukebox.


So don’t tell me what to write.


1981. Online


Source

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