The pharaohs of rice and indigo, the conniving
Caesars of cotton,
what were we to them?
Profitable: able
bodies from Barbados
and the Windward Coast,
the Rice Coast,
our souls ramshackle,
less than a rooster’s
or a rock’s.
And yet, in painstaking fields,
in joyous praise houses,
our tenacious “Go Down, Moses,”
our stirring, rallying
“In the beauty of the lilies
Christ was born across the sea . . .”
might have served as proof
to those zealous Southern despots
that we possessed
some quilt scrap of God.
Go tell those greed-swayed
kings of sugar, those implacable
princes of tobacco,
how we garnered freedom
in our hardscrabble dreams,
sang it as sweat-drenched,
unshakable hallelujah,
whispered it as healing salve
to allay the defiling
stripes on our backs.
Unstinting overseer,
iron-eyed Caesar,
who better to define freedom
than a slave?
From The Gospel according to Wild Indigo (Southern Illinois University Press, 2018) by Cyrus Cassells. Copyright © 2018 by Cyrus Cassells. Used with the permission of the author.