"Better angels," "The catch," and "Embrace"
Better angels
Watching an old man
stumble in prime
time
the limbs of his mind
the ligaments
of his argument
strained to the point
of spraining
bruising, falling
down, make me almost
ask
has our country entered its dotage
(and who has power of attorney)
I would like to laugh since
America is more than prime
time, it’s an idea in the flesh.
Yes, in the beginning
there were words
big words, long sentences
your English teacher would tell you
no one should ever write like this:
“We hold these truths to be self-evident . . .
“In the course of human events . . .
“We, the people . . .
“Among the numerous advantages promised of a well-constructed union . . .”
And like any good pledge
so many a time so many of us
failed to match it
“All men are created equal”
never even got onto the wagon
before it had already fallen
off
But the pledge had been made
and we all heard it
And what it was, was how we,
the people believed
despite the fact that most of us
were not even citizens yet
that there are such things as better
angels roosting in our ideals
One day Douglass
One day Tubman
One day Lincoln
One day a tomb
for unknown soldiers
no matter how lowly
sprung including Marines
on Iwo Jima sands
like Fred Hayes
who were just “drunken
Indians” back home
Can you even picture what case
some Clarence Darrow will someday
make maybe a hundred or five hundred
years hence for our sake
Well, let’s make a case right now:
America
Can a nation half slave
and half free
endure
Can a nation shut its doors
to the lives of half
of its citizens
are there enough prisons
to hold all the illegal dreams
American freedom spawns
Can freedom ring if we, the people
must pay for every bell chime?
We know the answer
which is why we are willing
to stand beside a doddering
old man because he says
however haltingly
“O, yes, I say it plain,
America never was America to me,
And yet I swear this oath—
America will be”[1]
[1] These lines are taken from Langston Hughes poem, “Let America Be America Again”
The catch
-for Willie Mays (1931-2024)
No one ever caught a ball the way Say
Hey Mays did how he spun and gunned
down the runner with an arm they might
have stuck on the deck of a destroyer
in the Pacific if baseball was a weapon
that broke barriers the way mortar shells
do
except mortars actually build walls
and Say Hey Mays brought them down
like Jackie Larry Satchell Newk Elston
and Roy he made the American Dream
a true thing (sort of) and while Willie
was a legend and the catch became
something no one would believe now
because of AI doctored videos deep fakes
you couldn’t/can’t fake talent like that.
The catch. People forget how deep the Polo
Grounds was in dead Centre it was practically
in the Harlem River at a time when an entire
island cost $24 and you could spy white tailed deer
on Morningside Heights and Long Island was
a pungent green before the Valley of Ashes
and Gatsby’s deception.
Who comes from Dixie and plants his flag
in the middle of Yankee Town without firing
a single shot or waving the Stars and Bars
on the back of a mule sure the catch is a stubborn
fact of history and Cleveland so heavily favored
went down four games to none because the South’s
greatest weapon always was the Great Migration
remaking the map of the American Mind while stealing
second and third and landing a shot in the triple top
deck where people ate 5 cent bags of peanuts in suits
and got off work for the afternoon game selling
insurance before gambling was on all the phones.
God, to have seen Willie who died around the same
time as Jim Lawson can you imagine the game
of catch they might have played sitting on either end
of a lunch counter in Nashville. No. That’s not fair.
God, such talent. Who else could torque the meaning
of everything from a frozen rope to the Beatitudes
and win America a seat at the table of brotherhood?
Rest in peace, these United States. Willie’s first name
actually was Willie and he really believed in you
and baseball just like Reverand Jim. God help us if we
forget them.
Embrace
-for James Lawson (1928-2024)
God is the urge
men build jails to cage
and purge
which is why she bites the warden
on his inner thigh
like an asp with a perfect nose
not the devil in divine clothes
God is lust
and ashes and dust
the water and the hose
bunions and blisters
shackles car batteries
and calipers
the general’s stache
the priest’s finger
a president who is
a dead ringer
for a child opening
his eyes and squalling
because
God drove him from a warm
bath drawn up by two tubes
and an egg, lawyers want
that gig, to become engineers
and decide the flow.
God,
you can’t keep
ideas locked up
they become
measures unheard
notes un-played
their absence
a presence on
the page
if the body keeps
the score
if tree rings bend
and are blent
by the ash of their
fruit
then surely God
God God my God
how many times can
we make up a word
that the silence surrounding
OM can’t retard
tattoo on your arm
in place of a name
burn the skin
efface the haste
where you vulcanized
the ink until the ground
travels through space
like the first cough
that initial binding
My God let’s just stop
talking and embrace.
Jeremy Nathan Marks lives in the Great Lakes Region of Canada. His latest book is Caucus Country (Alien Buddha Press, 2024). He might hold his breath until the second Tuesday in November, breaking the world record. Jeremy recommends the Center for Biological Diversity.