taunt the sullen wind. xli A crumbling hut… in the third room a red chenille bedspread (by Cannon) a cracked jar of violet lilies (by?) xlii The native women thought me strange until they saw me follow you to your hut. xliii In Kampala the young king goes often to Church the young girls here are So pious. xliv Settled behind tall banana trees the little hut is overcovered by their leaves patiently it waits for autumn which never comes.… xlv in my journal I thought I could capture everything.… Listen! the soft wings of cranes sifting the salt sea air. * Kikuyu clan name indicating honorary acceptance into the Leopard clan. * A food staple of the Buganda in Uganda, made from plantains.
LOVE i A dark stranger My heart searches Him out “Papa!” ii An old man in white Calls me “mama” It does not take much To know He wants me for His wife— He has no teeth But is kind. iii The American from Minnesota Speaks Harvardly of Revolution— Men of the Mau Mau Smile Their fists holding Bits of Kenya earth. iv A tall Ethiopian Grins at me The grass burns My bare feet. v Drums outside My window Morning whirls In I have danced all Night. vi The bearded Briton Wears a shirt of Kenya flags I am at home He says. vii Down the hill A grove of trees And on this spot The magic tree. viii The Kenya air! Miles of hills Mountains And holding both My hands A Mau Mau leader. ix And in the hut The only picture— Of Jesus x Explain to the Women In the village That you are Twenty And belong— To no one.
KARAMOJANS i A tall man Without clothes Beautiful Like a statue Up close His eyes Are running Sores. ii The Noble Savage Erect No shoes on his feet His pierced ears Infected. iii “Quite incredible— your hair-do is most divine—— Held together With cow dung? You mean——?! The lady stares At her fingers. iv A proper English meal Near the mountains “More tea, please” Down the street A man walks Quite completely Nude. v Bare breasts loose In the sun The skin cracked The nipples covered With flies But she is an old Woman What?—twenty? vi A Catholic church The chaste cross Stark Against the purple sky. We surprise a couple there alone In prayer? vii There is no need for Sadness After the dying boy There is the living girl Who throws you a kiss. viii How bright the little girl’s Eyes were! a first sign of Glaucoma. ix The Karamojans Never civilized A proud people I think there Are A hundred left.
ONCE i Green lawn a picket fence flowers— My friend smiles she had heard that Southern jails were drab. Looking up I see a strong arm raised the Law Someone in America is being protected (from me.) In the morning there was a man in grey but the sky was blue. ii “Look at that nigger with those white folks!” My dark Arrogant friend turns calmly, curiously helpfully, “Where?” he asks. It was the fifth arrest In as many days How glad I am that I can look surprised still. iii Running down Atlanta streets With my sign I see heads turn Eyes goggle “a nice girl like her!” A Negro cook assures her mistress— But I had seen the fingers near her eyes wet with tears. iv One day in Georgia Working around the Negro section My friend got a letter in the mail —the letter said “I hope you’re having a good time fucking all the niggers.” “Sweet,” I winced. “Who wrote it?” “mother.” she said. That day she sat a long time a little black girl in pigtails on her lap Her eyes were very Quiet. She used to tell the big colored ladies her light eyes just the same “I am alone my mother died.” Though no other letter came. v It is true— I’ve always loved the daring ones Like the black young man Who tried to crash All barriers at