to be considered before inviting everyone to The Cookout™

the gone did not go so that we’d endure
plucking grapes from the potato salad
we did not stretch Frankie Beverly’s voice
like a tent across this humble meadow
of amber folk sipping gold sun through skin
rejoicing over their continued breath
just for you to invite anyone in
able to pause the bloody legacy
and distract your eyes with a flimsy act
you break all the unwritten covenants
forged in the saved language of unmarked graves
those called to eat are those who starved with us
and not those whose mouths still water
when watching the grill’s flame lick Uncle’s arm
Credit

Copyright © 2019 by Rasheed Copeland. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on February 15, 2019, by the Academy of American Poets.

About this Poem

“The poem was spawned while reflecting on the communal nature of suffering. Within the communities that raised me, suffering has always possessed an unspoken sacredness. In many regards, it has been a key factor in forging family, kinship, and allyship. It has possessed both pain and fortune. With this poem, I’m attempting to caution against offering the spoils of our suffering to those who’ve shown no true investment in the community.”
—Rasheed Copeland