CC photo
By
Brian Glaser
The Invisible Question
Mendez v. Westminster
Lies—
some writers are openly proud
of their ability to tell them—
may a strong wind blow them away,
ashes on the Mediterranean Sea.
Students go to school
to escape from ubiquitous lies—
some say to use language is to lie;
each green leaf is as different from every other
as a star from a galaxy.
And the imagination,
the source of all our dreams,
may be amoral.
With all these forces arrayed against it, perhaps
it is a wonder
that the truth survives.
The truth is a relative concept, in fact,
it occurs to me upon reflection—
we need enough of it
to keep goodness and beauty nearby.
It is when they go missing
that it is time for a trial—
time for a jury of school-aged children,
some of them wishing
with a passion to testify,
a passion
like earthrise in the Arctic—
the necessity of learning
from what has never been said.
Mendez v. Westminster – Gonzalo Mendez in the 1940s sued an Orange County school district which segregated students because of the color of their skin. The rationale for the segregation was that it would help students to learn English.
Sundown In Orange
1.
There is no beginning—
the roads are still talking to you, asking
you the way.
So what is yours?—
your skin is made of glass;
it burns sometimes—
You are climbing the face
of and yet—
leave your quickdraws,
the cloud at the summit—
breath of the water, waiting—
where do you see this from, if not the midst
of your own life?
2.
First, do no harm—
harm to whom?
What if you were innocent
of the damage wrought by your politics—
if what mattered were your intentions alone
and the force that you were?
The American middle class
is terrified
of financial disaster—
and traitors, radicals:
though history moves like the plates of the earth.
3.
When you wake in the winter cold,
you doubt that goodness—
when the nurse calls us in—
we talk to the portrait
of the one
who does good by accident.
So—for reparations—we don’t have
the expertise we need
in which children stole how much from whom,
in why
life is too brief for the whole arc
of morality on earth.
4.
Justice is volcanic,
poetry erodes.
One creates heights, one creates depths.
Looking deeply into someone’s eyes—
a more vertiginous sight,
we should all have someone with whom
to share
that human vista.
Sundown in Orange – Orange, California was a sundown town through the 1950s. This meant black people were unwelcome at night.
Chapman University in those years shared with the Orange police photos of its students so they wouldn’t be harassed.
Brian Glaser
Brian Glaser has published a book of poems, The Sacred Heart, and many essays on poetry and poetics. He is an assistant professor of English at Chapman University in Orange, California.
Beautiful poems Brian!