Ways to be White in a Poem
Tension makes
a form resound
and so the many lines I am told
not to cross
Do not go out alone at night
Do not call attention to yourself
Closer to the color line
the more I am
White girl
fool
It is a while before
the other girls
correct me, gently. Good timbre needs
more air
Shout out!
Muscles flex, quick-shift
I stomp, impious
impervious, now
Tension makes
a form resound
and so the many lines I am told
not to cross
Do not go out alone at night
Do not call attention to yourself
Closer to the color line
the more I am
White girl
fool
It is a while before
the other girls
correct me, gently. Good timbre needs
more air
Shout out!
Muscles flex, quick-shift
I stomp, impious
impervious, now
Do not dance suggestively
Hold a stranger’s eyes
That first day in the gym
I asked the row
Could I
thinkingabout cheers
elbows sharp, foregrounded
feet, cloud-
stepping
Never of
A cheer
as the body
went up
As if I were. Were not
Branch creaking
Rope tautAnd, maybe you, too---
whoever you are---reading this
flicker
Do not touch
Or eat
Their food
Do not drink
From the same cup
***
From Dark~Sky Society (Western Michigan University, 2014). Used with permission.
***
Ailish Hopper grew up in DC, and is the author of Dark~Sky Society (2014), selected by David St. John as runner up for the New Issues prize, and the chapbook Bird in the Head (2005), selected by Jean Valentine for the Center for Book Arts Prize. Individual poems have appeared in Agni, APR, Blackbird, Harvard Review Online, Ploughshares, Poetry, Tidal Basin Review, and other places. She has received support from the Baltimore Commission for the Arts and Humanities, the MacDowell Colony, Maryland State Arts Council, and Yaddo. Her essays on art and literature that deal with race have appeared in or are forthcoming in Boston Review, The Volta, and the anthology,A Sense of Regard: Essays on Poetry and Race. She is currently at work on an essay about imagining the world after the reign of white supremacy. She teaches at Goucher College.
***
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