Black Matters

Black Matters by Keith S. Wilson
Black Matters
after D.H. Lawrence shall i tell you, then, that we exist? there came a light, blue and white careening. the police like wailing angels to bitter me. and so this: dark matter is hypothetical. know that it cannot be seen in the gunpowder of a flower, in a worm that raisins on the concrete, in a man that wills himself not to speak. gags, oh gags. for a shadow cannot breathe. it deprives them of nothing. pride is born in the black and then dies in it. i hear our shadow, low treble of the clasping of our hands. dark matter is invisible. we infer it: how light bends around a black body, and still you do not see black halos, even here, my having told you plainly where they are.
Poet: Keith S. Wilson
Source: @PoetryDaily
Books: @AbeBooks

Comments

Abigail George said…
Black power has always been defined by the black writer, the black intellectual, black educator, black novelist, black essayist, black preacher from the pulpit, and the black poet. Only the individual's blackness can speak to their lived experience, to their pain, to race relations as it exists today in America and elsewhere. I love reading Black poets because they speak the most honestly about black trauma and black vulnerability.

A poet is a poet is a poet.

In this day and age, I shouldn't be talking about the Black poet. I shouldn't be making a point of differentiating between poets by the very colour of their skin, but, sadly, racism still speaks to us today. The language of racism exists so we must continue our struggle to full and absolution liberation and the emancipation of the mind.