as he ran, his swollen feet stumbled
but he didn’t stop visions of snarling, angry beasts forced his aching muscles to run the cold wind gnawed hungrily at his flesh and the tree branches etched their marks of ownership across his face the night sounds surrounded him, betraying him to the baying hounds whose excessive barking grew louder with each step James took desperation threatened to overtake him so he frantically searched – his eyes flitted back and forth searching for something, festered sores cried out for his attention but he only ran faster tears mingled with the dread of capture marring his once proud face James now knows that there is no freedom there is only this – the constant, endless, angry barking of the master’s hounds coming to take his soul away. © Angela Jackson-Brown
1 Comment
I AM
When you look at me, you see not just an adopted baby of unknown pedigree but a baby shuffled from one Front Porch Monarch to the other, each trying to mark me, massaging their imprint into my skin with gnarled fingers in an effort to make me their own. a love child cradled by my daddy’s callused hands, hands that were rubbed soft with Jergens Lotion and Vaseline after long days of toiling for what seemed like at times only a few dimes and nickels. A country child begat by country folk who often got pecked by the beak of Jim Crow but who occasionally got the chance to peck him back. A blues child who jooked just as hard as the grown folks when J.W. Warren plucked blues harmonies in the guise of gospel tunes in order to satisfy both the tea drinkers and the shine sippers who all congregated under the Saturday night altar of stars and vast, Alabama skies. A sometimes fearful child who was warned about the Billy Bobs, Joe Nathans, and Cooter Lees who whooped it up on back country roads and side streets-- screaming racial epitaphs that burned crosses into the souls of the hearer, but in a pinch these men would do you right – whether you were white or black. But most of all I am a storyteller who is tied to generations of other proud storytellers whose stories I carry in my belly like unborn babies, waiting for the day when Emancipation comes, so I can be one of the first to set our stories free. © Angela Jackson-Brown, 2012 |
Archives
March 2021
Categories
All
Blog Roll
|