The Patient Ones
I’m staring out the window, but this is not my father’s depression
recalling fist fights I had in common with the masses
and being stared down by the non-homeless in disgust
waiting for the ink to dry on smog come down
flesh of my flesh
My father died tired of my pain
Cotton comes to the family structure
See me now
a window-apparition
of a Bantu pope
on the right side of power
I went to my maker only to find God
playfully singing, “. . . my back will be to you too”
yellow-tape-horizon
retelling of ambulance-found language
A soldier’s handling of body image
Or the gist of candlelight
the community is now jumping
throwing Baldwin his books
as he sits on the rafters taking requests
saying, “Gather around. I will set the sun for you.”
over outstretched hands of standard incarceration
Copyright © 2023 by Tongo Eisen-Martin. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on December 20, 2023, by the Academy of American Poets.
“This poem, on the one hand, presents a protagonist who does not understand why the (system-made) world wants him dead. Mainly because his material conditions force a coffin-like existence on him. There is only a creator of gallows-humor above, below, or to the side. But on the other hand, as if light could creak, there are slivers of liberation playing with his imagination. And the dance of this protagonist’s mood extends from and flows back into mass equations of liberatory potential—the first few steps into the foothills of transmutation.”
—Tongo Eisen-Martin