By
Matthew Hamilton
Wisdom Begins in Sorrow
I’ve been working the corners
In the city of Baltimore
For the better part of my life.
People done lost their best friend,
Their brothers and sons
Over these fucking corner wars.
This shit’s like Afghanistan. I
Wake up every morning at 5am
To sell drugs because minimum
Wage flipping burgers at McDonalds
Doesn’t support a family of 5.
And who gonna hire me
With my gold teeth and pants
Hanging off my ass? We some kinda
Monster to white folks, anyway,
And the government just sit
On their greedy hands and close
Their unapproachable eyes to the wisdom
That begins in sorrow. Look at the
School system. Where I gonna work
With no education? I want outta
This life, but how can I?
One day, I know it, I feel it,
I gonna look at my kids,
Fucked up in the head
As they pass birthday cake
Through a tiny opening
Of a prison cell,
My hand shaking with shame
Cause all I’m gonna think about
Is getting people high.
When Christianity Goes Bad
When I was a legislative assistant on Capitol Hill
a lobbyist wheels an AIDS patient into the office.
No one, other than me, speaks to him. No one,
other than me, shakes his bony hand.
I can’t help you, I say.
A tear shatters his recessed cheek. Does the Library
of Congress have any good books on mercy? he asks.
If it’s in our country’s best interest, I answer,
handing him a tissue, last one from the box,
and a disposable cup of water.
The man with AIDS soon dies. I wonder how God
is treating him. I wonder how God will treat me
after I die?
Matthew Hamilton
Matthew Hamilton holds a MFA from Fairfield University and a MLIS from St. John’s University. He is a 6- time Pushcart Prize nominee. His chapbook, The Land of the Four Rivers, published by Cervena Barva Press, won the 2013 Best Poetry Book from Peace Corps Writers. He and his wife live in Richmond, VA.
Matt, these are beautifully troubling poems. Relevant, universal, risking social commitment without complaint and speaking for those who many see but many do not care to know. Well done.