Take It Down
It will take a snip.
Go to one corner
and cut. Begin
with a red thread
and pull—gently.
First, you want to
take it apart slowly,
one long red thread
by one red thread,
calling out loud
a letter of every
name—nine more
now. Rough cloth,
it may not yield
with your next tug.
Find the thread
that holds it all
together, the heart
of a story that repeats
in our homes, our
schools, our capitals
of two-sided streets,
our separate entrances,
our safest houses
of gospel. Every
stitch made you will
want to weaken.
Hear the tear?
Now pull the cross
from its center,
the meeting place
of a long rope,
a stack of white robes,
welts on the bruised
backs, field reports
to the FBI. So many
threads of connection
to break. The deniers
are among us, still.
But the thread will give.
© 2015 Maureen E. Doallas
________________________
Tuesday, June 30, 2015
Take It Down (Poem)
Labels:
culture,
current events,
hate,
history,
poem,
poetry,
poetry writing,
race discrimination,
society,
symbolism,
symbols,
writing
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3 comments:
Another powerful one, Maureen. Thank you for keeping your gaze on the history of horrors that the Charston massacre lays bare.
After writing the poem, I came across Sonya Clark's project 'Unravelling':
sonyaclark.com
A very strong piece. And imagery and detail exceptional. I love this composition and how you structure it and sequenced it. It should be published in a periodical. Nice work.
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