Alabaster Hands
Edmonia Lewis, 1862 Let me tell you how white hands kilned me in the moonless middle of night. How they stripped and spittled and smeared me in an open field hardened with ice. How they worked so diligently upon me with palm and fist and angry sweat, with knuckle and dirty nail, until I was struck still as stone, until I was one with the dust of the Earth that called my name, whispered to me from its labyrinth of lava and buried bone. My truth was honed there, deep in the fated crease between life and loss. It willed me to rise from the dirt and staggered me home. I claimed for my own what they’d strived to strike from me. I scraped myself up from what they’d tried to beat down. And now I let them witness how artfully their curses fold; how ruthlessly I mastered their death-less hands beneath the weight of my mercy-fraught mold. Tyehimba Jess
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