In response to The Daily Post’s writing prompt: “Fireside Chat.”
A good, hard question for this Daily Post. I thought of several writers who I would love to hear life stories from: Langston Hughes, James Baldwin, Kahlil Gibran, Octavia Butler, or from the world of music, Chick Corea, Joni Mitchell, Ella Fitzgerald, or from the art world Georgia O’Keefe, (what’s with the flowers, girl?) She did a piece called Music that I saw a reproduction of in a museum gift shop, fell in love with, didn’t buy at the time, and haven’t been able to find since. But after the impulsiveness of the choices I initially made, I decided to go in a different direction.
I would want to talk to Frederick Douglass, not just read his books. I would like to see the expressions of his face when he reminisced about being a slave, getting his freedom, and being sold back.
I would want to hear his voice, the strength of it waxing eloquent as he wielded words of desiring freedom like a flaming sword, cutting through the hypocrisy of the crowds he addressed, the nation he lived in, holding up the mirror to a white slave owner, his reflection Douglass’ own face, for them to see the vileness of what they’d done.
In his straightened back would be the defiance of refusing to bend under the whip, to stand firmly on the ground for those who were hung from trees, in his quiet passion the balm that would heal the burning bodies of castrated black men, the violated black women, who dared for a moment to be human again.
I would look on the scars of his beatings, and feel my spine chill with the danger as he took his books to secret places to practice reading by moonlight and lantern under threat of death, but willing to die.
In his eyes would be the sound of the spirituals ringing over the fields, the sound of chains, the sound of violins and dancing, the tears of the pregnant slave women walking at night to drop their half-breed progeny into rivers and off hilltops, or bury them silently in the woods, or suckle them in silent, tearful suffering.
From him, I would feel the will to survive the Middle Passage, the pride of fierce anger, of refusing to let go of the old ways, of holding on to the memories of ancestral tribes and customs and language, slowly eroding like promontory rocks, or crushed and driven out like crushed and broken shells at high tide.
And as the fire died, and sleep grew heavy on my eyes, and his visage began to fade in the paling light of the rising sun, I would then have a reason, and find the strength, to go on, and on, and on…
Category: Musings
Victory Flags
You should know:
Victory Flags are not always grand, unfurling banners embroidered with gold sigils of lions rampant, soaring eagles, flame-spewing dragons, diving falcons, and weapons of war, planted at the heads of armies, looking down into valleys of defeated foes.
Sometimes…
they’re just the right words of comfort in a time of despair,
or dirty, blood-soaked rags stanching bleeding wounds,
or taking a deep, ragged breath before making the next shaky effort…
sometimes it’s looking up the mountain at the descending hordes gathered against you
and getting back up to stand, and exhale a whispered, defiant declaration
into the howling winds and roiling clouds of your most ferocious storm,
“I’m still here.”
© Alfred W. Smith Jr.
Temple of the Wind
Sunlight on stone,
fading,
a royal carpet of vermillion,
lighting the wind’s way
into the
empty chamber
to swirl the
thick dust.
We no longer pray here,
but the
spirits
still come.
© Alfred W. Smith Jr.
Sorry I Scribbled
I’m sorry I scribbled.
I mean, I know how
you
like
everything
inside the / line\s
I’m sorry I scribbled over
your
picture of what
we
should look like.
I’m sorry if I used the
wrong color.
I’m sorry that I don’t
conform
to
Crayola’s decrees…
But what the hell.
I’m innovative.
Pass me the green one…
© Alfred W. Smith Jr.
Throne of Armageddon
Empty scabbards
and
broken swords
carelessly tossed
before the
empty throne
Dead torches hang on dampened walls
lighting
Death’s way in perfect
darkness
Distant thunder,
softly rumbling, makes
gentle inquiries,
whispering names of
souls long
vanquished.
All is
ended.
All is
lost.
Behold the throne
of
Armageddon
who no longer
reigns
© Alfred W. Smith Jr.
Modern Day Tolkien…
The Habit: or There and Back Again…and Back Again…. and Back Again…and Back Again….
By a Seaport Village
In a cluster of tourist trap
hut-stores
by the Bay
on small,
semi-labyrinthine
streets,
the store
with
the chimes
caught my
fancy.
Weatherbeaten metals
Delicate shells
Wood and stones
Colors and animals
Glass, plain and stained
harmonies blending
in the
evening breeze
Calling
the stars,
Calling
the sea,
to join the
endless
song
of the
voyaging
wind…
© Alfred W. Smith Jr.
Coming of Age
Of which age do I come?
On which day?
I don’t understand this,
for it seems to me that
men
are always
coming of age.
There are only
new times
new similarities
and
old changes
mixing with variation.
A
bubble
of maybes,
this life
I lead.
Coming of age
is holding aloft your
first born son
and
burying your father,
doing both with a hearty laugh
and tears of joy.
Men,
it seems to me,
are always
coming of age.
Every day he does not
understand,
he comes of age
anew.
© Alfred W. Smith Jr.
Broken Peaces
Peace of mind
Peace of heart
Peace of spirit
Peace of soul
Peace of stable relationships
Peace of His promises
Peace of the Blood covering
Peace of the New Covenant
Peace in the home
Peace of enough
Peace of community
Peace with God
Peace with Man
Peace that passes all understanding
Broken
by
me
And in His
mercy
He will put the
broken peaces
back,
and
restore me.
Amen
© Alfred W. Smith Jr.
Crystalline
The madness stirs.
I feel it in the pit of my belly, I see it by the light of my mind
its eyes are open, fully focused on its target.
Like a snake on a branch, it incrementally inches, painstakingly progresses
My mind strikes out in fear, but it is not vanquished
My soul screams, but its approach is relentless
My heart quails in terror, but its eyes are merciless
Unwavering,
it wraps me in its writhing,
cold coils
and
bites
the heart
And for the first and last time
I lose myself
to
Love
© Alfred W. Smith Jr.
