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    The Complete Collected Poems of Maya Angelou

    Page 5
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      But when I start to tell them,

      They think I'm telling lies.

      I say,

      It's in the reach of my arms,

      The span of my hips,

      The stride of my step,

      The curl of my lips.

      I'm a woman

      Phenomenally.

      Phenomenal woman,

      That's me.

      I walk into a room

      Just as cool as you please,

      And to a man,

      The fellows stand or

      Fall down on their knees.

      Then they swarm around me,

      A hive of honey bees.

      I say,

      It's the fire in my eyes,

      And the flash of my teeth,

      The swing in my waist,

      And the joy in my feet.

      I'm a woman

      Phenomenally. Phenomenal woman,

      That's me.

      Men themselves have wondered

      What they see in me.

      They try so much

      But they can't touch

      My inner mystery.

      When I try to show them,

      They say they still can't see.

      I say,

      It's in the arch of my back,

      The sun of my smile,

      The ride of my breasts,

      The grace of my style.

      I'm a woman

      Phenomenally.

      Phenomenal woman,

      That's me.

      Now you understand

      Just why my head's not bowed.

      I don't shout or jump about

      Or have to talk real loud.

      When you see me passing,

      It ought to make you proud.

      I say,

      It's in the click of my heels,

      The bend of my hair,

      the palm of my hand,

      The need for my care.

      ‘Cause I'm a woman

      Phenomenally.

      Phenomenal woman,

      That's me.

      Men

      When I was young, I used to

      Watch behind the curtains

      As men walked up and down

      The street. Wino men, old men.

      Young men sharp as mustard.

      See them. Men are always

      Going somewhere.

      They knew I was there. Fifteen

      Years old and starving for them.

      Under my window, they would pause,

      Their shoulders high like the

      Breasts of a young girl,

      Jacket tails slapping over

      Those behinds,

      Men.

      One day they hold you in the

      Palms of their hands, gentle, as if you

      Were the last raw egg in the world. Then

      They tighten up. Just a little. The

      First squeeze is nice. A quick hug.

      Soft into your defenselessness. A little

      More. The hurt begins. Wrench out a

      Smile that slides around the fear. When the

      Air disappears,

      Your mind pops, exploding fiercely, briefly,

      Like the head of a kitchen match. Shattered.

      It is your juice

      That runs down their legs. Staining their shoes.

      When the earth rights itself again, And taste tries to return to the tongue,

      Your body has slammed shut. Forever.

      No keys exist.

      Then the window draws full upon

      Your mind. There, just beyond

      The sway of curtains, men walk.

      Knowing something.

      Going someplace.

      But this time, you will simply

      Stand and watch.

      Maybe.

      Refusal

      Beloved,

      In what other lives or lands

      Have I known your lips

      Your hands

      Your laughter brave

      Irreverent.

      Those sweet excesses that

      I do adore.

      What surety is there

      That we will meet again,

      On other worlds some

      Future time undated.

      I defy my body's haste.

      Without the Promise

      Of one more sweet encounter

      I will not deign to die.

      Just for a Time

      Oh how you used to walk

      With that insouciant smile

      I liked to hear you talk

      And your style

      Pleased me for a while.

      You were my early love

      New as a day breaking in Spring

      You were the image of

      Everything

      That caused me to sing.

      I don't like reminiscing

      Nostalgia is not my forte

      I don't spill tears

      On yesterday's years

      But honesty makes me say,

      You were a precious pearl

      How I loved to see you shine,

      You were the perfect girl.

      And you were mine.

      For a time.

      For a time.

      Just for a time.

      Junkie Monkey Reel

      Shoulders sag,

      The pull of weighted needling.

      Arms drag, smacking wet in soft bone

      Sockets.

      Knees thaw,

      Their familiar magic lost. Old bend and

      Lock and bend forgot.

      Teeth rock in fetid gums.

      Eyes dart, die, then float in

      Simian juice.

      Brains reel,

      Master charts of old ideas erased. The

      Routes are gone beneath the tracks

      Of desert caravans, pre-slavery

      Years ago.

      Dreams fail,

      Unguarded fears on homeward streets

      Embrace. Throttling in a dark revenge

      Murder is its sweet romance.

      How long will

      This monkey dance?

      The Lesson

      I keep on dying again.

      Veins collapse, opening like the

      Small fists of sleeping

      Children.

      Memory of old tombs,

      Rotting flesh and worms do

      Not convince me against

      The challenge. The years

      And cold defeat live deep in

      Lines along my face.

      They dull my eyes, yet

      I keep on dying,

      Because I love to live.

      California Prodigal

      FOR DAVID P-B

      The eye follows, the land

      Slips upward, creases down, forms

      The gentle buttocks of a young

      Giant. In the nestle,

      Old adobe bricks, washed of

      Whiteness, paled to umber,

      Await another century.

      Star Jasmine and old vines

      Lay claim upon the ghosted land,

      Then quiet pools whisper

      Private childhood secrets.

      Flush on inner cottage walls

      Antiquitous faces,

      Used to the gelid breath

      Of old manors, glare disdainfully

      Over breached time.

      Around and through these

      Cold phantasmatalities,

      He walks, insisting

      To the languid air,

      Activity, music,

      A generosity of graces.

      His lupin fields spurn old

      Deceit and agile poppies dance

      In golden riot. Each day is Fulminant, exploding brightly

      Under the gaze of his exquisite

      Sires, frozen in the famed paint

      Of dead masters. Audacious

      Sunlight casts defiance

      At their feet.

      My Arkansas

      There is a deep brooding

      in Arkansas.

      Old crimes like moss pend

      from poplar trees.

      The sullen ear
    th

      is much too

      red for comfort.

      Sunrise seems to hesitate

      and in that second

      lose its

      incandescent aim, and

      dusk no more shadows

      than the noon.

      The past is brighter yet.

      Old hates and

      ante-bellum lace are rent

      but not discarded.

      Today is yet to come

      in Arkansas.

      It writhes. It writhes in awful

      waves of brooding.

      Through the Inner City to the Suburbs

      Secured by sooted windows

      And amazement, it is

      Delicious. Frosting filched

      From a company cake.

      People. Black and fast. Scattered

      Watermelon seeds on

      A summer street. Grinning in

      Ritual, sassy in pomp.

      From a slow-moving train

      They are precious. Stolen gems

      Unsaleable and dear. Those

      Dusky undulations sweat of forest

      Nights, damp dancing, the juicy

      Secrets of black thighs.

      Images framed picture perfect

      Do not move beyond the window

      Siding.

      Strong delectation:

      Dirty stories in changing rooms

      Accompany the slap of wet towels and

      Toilet seats.

      Poli-talk of politician

      Parents: “They need shoes and

      Cooze and a private Warm latrine. I had a colored Mammy …”

      The train, bound for green lawns

      Double garages and sullen women

      In dreaded homes, settles down

      On its habit track.

      Leaving

      The dark figures dancing

      And grinning. Still

      Grinning.

      Lady Luncheon Club

      Her counsel was accepted: the times are grave.

      A man was needed who would make them think,

      And pay him from the petty cash account.

      Our woman checked her golden watch,

      The speaker has a plane to catch.

      Dessert is served (and just in time).

      The lecturer leans, thrusts forth his head

      And neck and chest, arms akimbo

      On the lectern top. He summons up

      Sincerity as one might call a favored

      Pet.

      He understands the female rage,

      Why Eve was lustful and

      Delilah's

      Grim deceit.

      Our woman thinks:

      (This cake is much too sweet).

      He sighs for youthful death

      And rape at ten, and murder of

      The soul stretched over long.

      Our woman notes:

      (This coffee's much too strong). The jobless streets of

      Wine and wandering when

      Mornings promise no bright relief.

      She claps her hands and writes

      Upon her pad: (Next time the

      Speaker must be brief).

      Momma Welfare Roll

      Her arms semaphore fat triangles,

      Pudgy hands bunched on layered hips

      Where bones idle under years of fatback

      And lima beans.

      Her jowls shiver in accusation

      Of crimes clichéd by

      Repetition. Her children, strangers

      To childhood's toys, play

      Best the games of darkened doorways,

      Rooftop tag, and know the slick feel of

      Other people's property.

      Too fat to whore,

      Too mad to work,

      Searches her dreams for the

      Lucky sign and walks bare-handed

      Into a den of bureaucrats for

      Her portion.

      “They don't give me welfare.

      I take it.”

      The Singer Will Not Sing

      FOR A. L.

      A benison given. Unused,

      no angels promised,

      wings fluttering banal lies

      behind their sexlessness. No

      trumpets gloried

      prophecies of fabled fame.

      Yet harmonies waited in

      her stiff throat. New notes

      lay expectant on her

      stilled tongue.

      Her lips are ridged and

      fleshy. Purpled night birds

      snuggled to rest.

      The mouth seamed, voiceless.

      Sounds do not lift beyond

      those reddened walls.

      She came too late and lonely

      to this place.

      Willie

      Willie was a man without fame,

      Hardly anybody knew his name.

      Crippled and limping, always walking lame,

      He said, “I keep on movin’

      Movin’ just the same.”

      Solitude was the climate in his head,

      Emptiness was the partner in his bed,

      Pain echoed in the steps of his tread,

      He said, “I keep on followin’

      Where the leaders led.

      “I may cry and I will die,

      But my spirit is the soul of every spring,

      Watch for me and you will see

      That I'm present in the songs that children sing.”

      People called him “Uncle,” “Boy” and “Hey,”

      Said, “You can't live through this another day.”

      Then, they waited to hear what he would say.

      He said, “I'm living

      In the games that children play.

      “You may enter my sleep, people my dreams,

      Threaten my early morning's ease,

      But I keep comin’ followin’ laughin’ cryin',

      Sure as a summer breeze.

      “Wait for me, watch for me.

      My spirit is the surge of open seas.

      Look for me, ask for me,

      I'm the rustle in the autumn leaves.

      “When the sun rises

      I am the time.

      When the children sing

      I am the Rhyme.”

      To Beat the Child Was Bad Enough

      A young body, light

      As winter sunshine, a new

      Seed's bursting promise,

      Hung from a string of silence

      Above its future.

      (The chance of choice was never known.)

      Hunger, new hands, strange voices,

      Its cry came natural, tearing.

      Water boiled in innocence, gaily

      In a cheap pot.

      The child exchanged its

      Curiosity for terror. The skin

      Withdrew, the flesh submitted.

      Now, cries make shards

      Of broken air, beyond an unremembered

      Hunger and the peace of strange hands.

      A young body floats.

      Silently.

      Woman Work

      I've got the children to tend

      The clothes to mend

      The floor to mop

      The food to shop

      Then the chicken to fry

      The baby to dry

      I got company to feed

      The garden to weed

      I've got the shirts to press

      The tots to dress

      The cane to be cut

      I gotta clean up this hut

      Then see about the sick

      And the cotton to pick.

      Shine on me, sunshine

      Rain on me, rain

      Fall softly, dewdrops

      And cool my brow again.

      Storm, blow me from here

      With your fiercest wind

      Let me float across the sky

      Till I can rest again.

      Fall gently, snowflakes

      Cover me with white

      Cold icy kisses and

      Let me rest tonight. Sun, rain, curving sky

      Mountain, oceans, leaf and
    stone

      Star shine, moon glow

      You're all that I can call my own.

      One More Round

      There ain't no pay beneath the sun

      As sweet as rest when a job's well done.

      I was born to work up to my grave

      But I was not born

      To be a slave.

      One more round

      And let's heave it down,

      One more round

      And let's heave it down.

      Papa drove steel and Momma stood guard,

      I never heard them holler ‘cause the work was hard.

      They were born to work up to their graves

      But they were not born

      To be worked-out slaves.

      One more round

      And let's heave it down,

      One more round

      And let's heave it down.

      Brothers and sisters know the daily grind,

      It was not labor made them lose their minds.

      They were born to work up to their graves

      But they were not born

      To be worked-out slaves.

      One more round

      And let's heave it down,

      One more round

      And let's heave it down.

      And now I'll tell you my Golden Rule,

      I was born to work but I ain't no mule.

      I was born to work up to my grave

      But I was not born

      To be a slave.

      One more round

      And let's heave it down,

      One more round

      And let's heave it down.

      The Traveler

      Byways and bygone

      And lone nights long

      Sun rays and sea waves

      And star and stone

      Manless and friendless

      No cave my home

     


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