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		<title>goodbye</title>
		<link>https://verbalprivilege.wordpress.com/2010/11/24/goodbye/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[kitabet]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Nov 2010 04:40:29 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[This place is over (it had a good run, but it was time to leave). Thank you for everything.  I&#8217;ll leave the last words here to Adrienne Rich, as I did the first: North American Time I When my dreams &#8230; <a href="https://verbalprivilege.wordpress.com/2010/11/24/goodbye/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This place is over (it had a good run, but it was time to leave).</p>
<p>Thank you for everything.  I&#8217;ll leave the last words here to Adrienne Rich, as I did the first:</p>
<p><strong>North American Time</strong></p>
<p>I<br />
When my dreams showed signs<br />
of becoming<br />
politically correct<br />
no unruly images<br />
escaping beyond border<br />
when walking in the street I found my<br />
themes cut out for me<br />
knew what I would not report<br />
for fear of enemies&#8217; usage<br />
then I began to wonder</p>
<p>II<br />
Everything we write<br />
will be used against us<br />
or against those we love.<br />
These are the terms,<br />
take them or leave them.<br />
Poetry never stood a chance<br />
of standing outside history.<br />
One line typed twenty years ago<br />
can be blazed on a wall in spraypaint<br />
glorify art as detachment<br />
or torture of those we<br />
did not love but also<br />
did not want to kill</p>
<p>We move     but our words stand<br />
become responsible<br />
and this is verbal privilege</p>
<p>III<br />
Try sitting at a typewriter<br />
one calm summer evening<br />
at a table by a window<br />
in the country, try pretending<br />
your time does not exist<br />
that you are simply you<br />
that the imagination simply strays<br />
like a great moth, unintentional<br />
try telling yourself<br />
you are not accountable<br />
to the life of your tribe<br />
the breath of your planet</p>
<p>IV<br />
It doesn&#8217;t matter what you think.<br />
Words are found responsible<br />
all you can do is choose them<br />
or choose<br />
to remain silent.  Or, you never had a choice,<br />
which is why the words that do stand<br />
are responsible<br />
and this is verbal privilege</p>
<p>V<br />
Suppose you want to write<br />
of a woman braiding<br />
another woman&#8217;s hair&#8211;<br />
staightdown, or with beads and shells<br />
in three-strand plaits or corn-rows&#8211;<br />
you had better know the thickness<br />
the length     the pattern<br />
why she decides to braid her hair<br />
how it is done to her<br />
what country it happens in<br />
what else happens in that country</p>
<p>You have to know these things</p>
<p>VI<br />
Poet, sister:  words&#8211;<br />
whether we like it or not&#8211;<br />
stand in a time of their own.<br />
no use protesting     <em>I wrote that<br />
before Kollontai was exiled<br />
Rosa Luxembourg, Malcolm,<br />
Anna Mae Aquash, murdered,<br />
before Treblinka, Birkenau,<br />
Hiroshima, before Sharpeville,<br />
Biafra, Bangla Desh, Boston,<br />
Atlanta, Soweto, Beirut, Assam</em><br />
&#8211;those faces, names of places<br />
sheared from the almanac<br />
of North American time</p>
<p>VII<br />
I am thinking this in a country<br />
where words are stolen out of mouths<br />
as bread is stolen out of mouths<br />
where poets don&#8217;t go to jail<br />
for being poets, but for being<br />
dark-skinned, female, poor.<br />
I am writing this in a time<br />
when anything we write<br />
can be used against those we love<br />
where the context is never given<br />
though we try to explain, over and over<br />
For the sake of poetry at least<br />
I need to know these things</p>
<p>VIII<br />
Sometimes, gliding at night<br />
in a plane over New York City<br />
I have felt like some messenger<br />
called to enter, called to engage<br />
this field of light and darkness.<br />
A grandiose idea, born of flying.<br />
But underneath the grandiose idea<br />
is the thought that what I must engage<br />
after the plane has rage onto the tarmac<br />
after climbing my old stair, sitting down<br />
at my old window<br />
is meant to break my heart and reduce me to silence.</p>
<p>IX<br />
In North America time stumbles on<br />
without moving, only releasing<br />
a certain North American pain.<br />
Julia de Burgos wrote:<br />
<em>That my grandfather was a slave<br />
is my grief; had he been a master<br />
that would have been my shame</em>.<br />
A poet&#8217;s words, hung over a door<br />
in North America, in the year<br />
nineteen-eighty-three.<br />
The almost-full moon rises<br />
timeless speaking of change<br />
out of the Bronx, the Harlem River<br />
the drowned towns of the Quabbin<br />
the pilfered burial mounds<br />
the toxic swamps, the testing-grounds<br />
and I start to speak again.</p>
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