By
Renee Drummond-Brown
Plight
You don’t get that right
To understand our plight
Were you there?
When that slave girl
Was ‘KILLED’
The very day,
They stole her away
Were you there?
When that slave girl
Was bound
Shackled and chained
Cow bells on the neck
That ‘rang’
Were you there?
When she rode that vast ocean
On Noah’s waves
Of never ending rains
Were you there?
At ‘HER’ door of ‘NO RETURN’
Uneducated to your customs and ways
‘Wit’ an unfair playing ground while trying to learn
Were you there?
Standing on ‘dat’ Auction Block
At 14 years of age
As she watched
‘Dat’ Auctioneer’s gavel drop!!!
SOLD: TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER!
He’d say
To her dismay
ALL WAS LOST
Down to her family;
Just given away
‘FREE’ of cost
Were you there?
As she picked a bail,
O’ COTTON
Were you there?
When sorting out the bushel’s
That rotted
Were you there as she picked
All through her midnight
Were you there?
When she couldn’t give ‘Massa’
Any fight
Were you there?
When she warmed ‘Massa’
Anytime ‘HE’ wanted both day and/or night
Were you there?
When she ‘HAD’ to cast ‘ALL’ her cares
On a ‘god’
That she was ‘TOLD’ didn’t care
Were you there?
As she entered those back doors
Were you there?
When she was called a wench and then some more…
Were you there?
When she was kicked to the ground
Like Christ,
Got back up
And never made a sound
Were you there?
When she had to eat slime and hogs
Were you there?
To watch her treated less than a dog
Were you there?
When mixed babies came from her
Were you there?
When she begged ‘Massa’ to keep ‘do’s’ chillins’ in ‘dat’ dear dirt
Plus for ‘da’ one’s not belonging to her
Were you there?
As she watched
So many ‘HUNG ON HIGH’
Were you there?
When she stood tall
At it all
Never allowing to cry
Were you there?
While she couldn’t tire, sleep nor snore
Were you there?
When she polished silverware
Plucked string beans
While
Cleaning on hands and knees
O’ those ‘HATED’ hardwood floors
Were you there?
When Missy lied on her
Were you there?
At her foul treatment
Far less than dirt
Were you there?
At her rape(s), beatings and cries
Were you there?
As she wondered
‘IF’
God even cared
Let alone was alive
Were you there?
When she prayed to just die
Were you there?
When she ate
Humility pie
Were you there?
At worship
While sitting in ‘dat’ balcony
Asking permission
To use ‘BLACK ONLY’ facilities
Were you there?
When ‘dat’ slave girl
Was KILLED
The day they stole her away
And
You have nerve to wonder why???
You don’t get that right
To understand
‘Our’ plight
I’ve been there
‘CAUSE’ SHE LIVES’
In ‘da’ ‘STEAL’ of my nights!!!
DNA of a SLAVE
WHO IS SHE?
I’ll introduce thee.
She comes out
When I hide my smile
Hand ‘ov’r’ mouth
Afraid to laugh
Afraid to cry
Afraid to shout
Not sure of self
She comes out
When she buries her son(s)
Both
Dead or alive
Stone cold heart
Conceals mistreatment
Without questioning
Thoughts, reasons or why???
She comes out
In the ‘BACK’ of a room
Or
‘Onna’
A bus
Without a peep
‘An’ leaves
‘For’
Anyone else
Can ‘SEE’
She was even
There
Way too soon
She comes out
As she writes
‘NEVER ALLOWING’
Those scribes
To fully take flight
Holding back words
In mid air
For ‘FEAR’
Of judgmental stares
And
Oppression glares
She comes out
Lowly like ‘HE’
So
Meek and mild
An instant woman
Who
Was ‘NEVER’ afforded
To be
Anyone’s child
She comes out
In hand me downs
So
Siblings,
Children
And
‘ALL’
Others around
Have ‘FIRST’
The best
Of
The
Best
She’s ‘ALWAYS’ last
But
‘NEVER’
Can she be first!
She comes out
Hurting inside
Being walked ‘ov’r’
Stabbed in ‘da’ back
By her own
But smiles
Through it all
Catching herself
At each and ev’ry
‘ONE’
Of ‘dem’
Falls
She comes out
MILD
She comes out
HURT
She comes out
‘Wit’
A SMILE
She comes out
In my
DNA
Your looking
At a slave.
Last Night I Cried!
I cried for the babies
Which are born
I cried for the brokenness
Of family, foe and friends
Which are torn
I cried for the siblings
Trying to make it in
I cried for the children
And their generation
I cried for the homeless
And their friends
I cried for the wife
And her husband
I cried for the elderly
And their present condition
I cried for the teachers
And this so called education
I cried for the Preachers
And their salvation
I cried for the widows
And their humiliation
I cried for both saved and unsaved
Without hesitation
I cried for the President
And our Nation
I cried for foreign countries
And their kin
I cried for racism
And the very present discrimination
I cried for the apartheid
And the segregation
I cried for poverty
And the ghettoization
I cried for loneliness
And resentment
I cried for seclusion
And isolation
I cried for divorce
And the separation
I even cried for self
And my own
Unforgiving sins!
But
On today
For
‘EVERYONE’
I prayed
For a new start
With a brand new begin
But
Until hearts change
On tonight
I’ll start crying all over again
Thank you Emmanuel Joseph Olumakiss for such heartfelt words. Yours truly, Pittsburgh author Renee' Drummond-Brown (Renee's Poems with Wings are Words in Flight).
Renee Drummond poems are edible words worth of consuming a life time,palatable foods for thought meant to teach morals,inculcate wisdom and fight social injustice. A great poetess with the poetic juice,ride on ma.