There's a way a woman
will not
relinquish
her pocketbook
even pulled
onstage, or called up
to the pulpit—
there's a
way only
your Auntie can make it
taste right—
rice &
gravy
is a meal
if my late Great Aunt
Toota makes
it—
Aunts cook like
there's no tomorrow
&
they're right.
Too hot
is how my Aunt Tuddie
peppers
everything,
her name given
by my father, four, seeing
her smiling
in her crib.
There's a barrel
full of rainwater
beside the
house
that my infant father will fall
into, trying to see
himself—the
bottom—
& there's his sister
Margie yanking him out
by his hair
grown long
as superstition. Never mind
the flyswatter they chase you
round the
house
& into the yard with
ready to whup the daylights
out of you—
that's only a threat—
Aunties will fix you
potato salad
& save
you some. Godmothers,
godsends,
Aunts smoke like
it's going out of style—
& it
is—
make even gold
teeth look right, shining.
saying I'll
be
John, with a sigh. Make way
out of no way—
keep they
key
to the scale that weighed
the cotton, the cane
we raised
more
than our share of—
If not them, then who
will win
heaven?
holding tight
to their pocketbooks
at the
pearly gates
just in case.
Kevin Young, Dear Darkness: Poems (Alfred A. Knopf,
2008)
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