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I
Inspired by Walt Whitman's Song of Myself
 
 
 
 
 
 
 “ Song Of Myself”
  
 
 
 
 
     I.
 
 We share the universe, you and I.
 
 It is ours.
 
 When the morning presses its sweet breath against the bare-chested earth 
 We hold the sun in our callused palms.
 
 I am the rays of sunshine that pour through your window 
 Like water from an overturned glass;
  you are the vivid hues of the aurora
 That paint the fresh-faced sky. 
 
 And every celestial body that has ever been
 Touched by an errant star in the December sky
 Every tuft of verdant grass that has sprouted from the
 Raw soil of the saint’s bones
 Is ours. 
 
   II.
 The realist with the horn-rimmed spectacles
 Will tell me that this rose is fleeting.
 That its scent, its petals
 Its rough thorny stem 
 Will wither
 And sink into the silt of English gardens.
 
 I choose not to hear such sentiments. 
 
 For I know that the this rose
 Is every rose there has ever been
 Every rose there will ever be.
 
 Its fragrance that imbues me 
 Encompasses the innonce of childhood,
 The wanderlust of the living and the finality of death. 
 
 My lungs are filled with the essence of the atmosphere 
 The ethos of a civilization, 
 Conducting the rhythmic palpations of my heart
 The harmonious release and intake of breaths.
 
 This is the song, 
 The cadence of the languor of life.
 The song to which we utter our first indignant cries 
 And the song whose chords rest on white lips.
 
 It is the rain on your windowpane
 The laugh of your husband
 The sorrow of loss
 And the ecstacy of love. 
 
 III.
 
 I have lived most of my life
 In a nation gone awry. 
 
 I remember the day it started 
 As perfectly as I remember my name. 
 
 Since a certain September morning
 It all just seemed to fall apart, 
 Like grains of sand slipping through 
 The cracks between your fingers.
  
 They all thought that war was the answer.
 They said it was for freedom
 But really, wasn’t it just 
 The crude reality of human greed? 
 
 For years 
 Revenge is what ran through the veins of the people
 Until they realized 
 What they had become.
 
 The one they had once praised 
 Became a palpable reminder 
 Of the growing monster 
 Known as “ America.”
 
 And then,
 He came ,
 The massiah-like man
 The gold-hearted savior;
 The face of change. 
 
 He instilled hope into the hearts and minds 
 Of lamenting citizens
 Speaking with conviction and earnestness 
 Telling us that 
 Change is possible. 
 
 I am speaking of course,
 Of the future;
 Barack Obama. 
 
 
 
 IV.
 
 On any given Sunday morning
 you will see them on the side of the road
 With worn clothing and weathered hands
 Dirt caked under their fingernails 
 Humming the song of the lost American Dream. 
 
 They dreamt of opportunity, they traveled over mountains
 And rivers, some oceans. 
 They yearn for the solace of the homeland 
 The scent of sugarcane and the lenitive language 
 Of their childhoods. 
 
 They are the hands that toil 
 The sweat and broken promises 
 They are the nameless dead,
 The melanin of the nation’s skin. 
 
 Every day they are spurned
 Returning home with empty pockets
 And perishing spirits. 
 
 And yet 
 They rise the next morning
 Only seeing the resplendence of light
 And an iota of hope. 
 
 V. 
 
 It’s a city with a thousand faces. 
 
 I once saw a mother in a fur coat 
 And pearls whiter than her boy’s teeth. 
 
 
 She was preoccupied with 
 The voice on the other end of her telephone
 Only occasionally eyeing a wan boy
 Who the held the hand of a dark woman with cornrows.
 
 He ran up to his mother, grasping her bejeweled hand
 Which she promptly pulled away. 
 
 It was one of those pitiful moments
 Where the exact second
 A paper-thin heart tears 
 Is louder than a thousand drums. 
 
 Downtown is a different world.
 Life is  slower , it trickles like thick honey. 
 Life is a winged enigma, 
 They attempt to capture it in its earthly forms,
 Behind the lens of a camera or the 
 Nib of a pen
 The strum of a guitar 
 Or the strokes of a brush. 
 
 
 The waifish girl 
 With the chestnut hair
 Angled over her forehead in an artful yet careless angle.
 
 Her dress is simple, black and grey. 
 She sits in the park,
 Knowing she owes the world nothing. 
 
 She doesn’t own much,
 Her favorite possession is a tattered 
 Marble notebook,
 Staining her hands with ink,
 The liquid of her subconscious. 
 
 She can’t remember her social security number
 But she will forever remember the way
 The leaves look today,
 The gold and red 
 And the perfect way the sun streams 
 Through them,
 Creating an effulgent burst of splendor.
 
 In Harlem they are singing to Jesus
 Powerful robust voices wafting through the air
 Setting souls on fire and making grandmothers 
 Dance again. 
 
 Times Square 
 paradox of garish atrocity and  neon beauty;
 Fulfilling the images of drawling visitors 
 and star-eyed thespians. 
 
 Stockholders 
 Artists
 Writers
 Photographers
 Musicians
 Doctors
 Lawyers
 Senators
 Chefs
 Street vendors
 The Homeless 
 Babies
 Nannies
 Mothers and Fathers
 Students 
 Husbands Wives
 Teenagers 
 Pacifists
 Immigrants
 
 
 
 They are the quintessence
 The ardor, the disdain, the
 Beautiful and hideous face 
 That is New York. 
 
 VI. 
 
 Who am I?
 
 I am the salt of your tears 
 The brine of the ocean
 The  dust on a butterfly’s wing
 
 I am the voice of  unwritten songs and forgotten reveries
 I forget no one, for I am everyone. 
 
 The unrecorded deaths
 The wayfaring children
 The unrequited lovers
 The wristcutters
 The painted women
  The battered  mothers
 The stillborn children
  And the ones who die with untold stories sifting in their brains. 
 
 They sink into the netherworld of wraiths
 Of the ghostly laughs of grown children
 
 Yet they are the fabric of the nation
 The fiber of spiderwebs
 And they are a part of me.
 
 
 I am a girl
 A girl with an Irish name and Spanish skin
 Who thinks every day is a poem 
 And weaves words together 
 Until they make some sense.
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