Read Horses Make a Landscape Look More Beautiful Online
Authors: Alice Walker
and your sister
plant a tree
When they assassinate
your leaders
and lovers
plant a tree
When they torture you
too bad
to talk
plant a tree.
When they begin to torture
the trees
and cut down the forest
they have made
start another.
Well.
He was a poet
a priest
a revolutionary
compañero
and we were right
to be seduced.
He brought us greetings
from his countrypeople
and informed us
with lifted
fist
that they would not
be moved.
All his poems
were eloquent.
I liked
especially
the one
that said
the revolution
must
liberate
the cougars, the trees,
and the lakes;
when he read it
everyone
breathed
relief;
ecology
lives
of all places
in Central
America!
we thought.
And then he read
a poem
about Grenada
and we
smiled
until he began
to describe
the women:
Well. One woman
when she smiled
had shiny black
lips
which reminded him
of black legs
(vaselined, no doubt),
her whole mouth
to the poet
revolutionary
suddenly
a leg
(and one said
What?)
Another one,
duly noted by
the priest,
apparently
barely attentive
at a political
rally
eating
a mango
Another wears
a red dress,
her breasts
(no kidding!)
like coconuts .…
Well. Nobody ever said
supporting other people’s revolutions
wouldn’t make us
ill:
But what a pity
that
the poet
the priest
and the revolution
never seem
to arrive
for the black woman,
herself.
Only for her black lips
or her black leg
does one or the other
arrive;
only for her
devouring mouth
always depicted
in the act
of eating
something colorful
only for her breasts
like coconuts
and her red dress.
The world is full of colored
people
People of Color
Tra-la-la
The world is full of
colored people
Tra-la-la-la-la.
They have black hair
and black and brown
eyes
The world is full of
colored people
Tra-la-la.
The world is full of colored
people
People of Color
Tra-la-la
The world is full of colored
people
Tra-la-la-la-la.
Their skins are pink and yellow
and brown
All colored people
People of Color
Colored people
Tra-la-la.
Some have full lips
Some have thin
Full of colored people
People of Color
Colored lips
Tra-la-la.
The world is full of
colored people
People of Color
Colorful people
Tra-la-la!
These days I think of Belvie
swimming happily in the country pond
coating her face with its mud.
She says:
“We could put the whole bottom of this pond in jars
and sell it to the folks
in the city!”
Lying in the sun she dreams
of making our fortune, à la Helena Rubenstein.
Bottling the murky water
too smelly to drink,
offering exotic mud facials and mineral baths
at exorbitant fees.
But mostly she lies in the sun
dreaming of water, sun and the earth
itself—
Surely the earth can be saved for Belvie.
These days I think of Robert
folding his child’s tiny shirts
consuming
TV
dinners (“A kind of
processed
flavor”)
rushing off each morning to school—then to the office,
the supermarket, the inevitable meeting: writing,
speaking, marching against oppression, hunger,
ignorance.
And in between having a love affair
with tiny wildflowers and gigantic
rocks.
“Look at this one!” he cries,
as a small purple face
raises its blue eye to the sun.
“Wow, look at that one!” he says,
as we pass a large rock
reclining beside the road.
He is the man with child
the new old man.
Brushing hair, checking hands, nails
and teeth.
A sick child finds comfort
lying on his chest all night
as do I.
Surely the earth can be saved for Robert.
These days I think of Elena.
In the summers, for years, she camps
beside the Northern rivers
sometimes with her children
sometimes with women friends
from “way, way back.”
She is never too busy to
want
at least
to join a demonstration
or to long to sit
beside
a river.
“I will not think less of you
if you do
not
attend this meeting,” she says,
making us compañeras for life.
Surely the earth can be saved for Elena.
These days I think of Susan;
so many of her people lost
in the Holocaust. Every time I see her
I can’t believe it.
“You have to have some of my cosmos seeds!”
she says
over the phone. “The blooms
are glorious!”
Whenever we are together
we eat a lot.
If I am at her house
it is bacon, boiled potatoes,
coffee and broiled fish:
if she is at my house it is
oyster stew, clams, artichokes
and wine.
Our dream is for time in which
to walk miles together, a couple
of weeds stuck between our teeth,
comfy in our yogi pants
discoursing on Woolf
and child raising,
essay writing and gardening.
Susan makes me happy
because she exists.
Surely the earth can be saved for Susan.
These days I think of Sheila.
“‘Sheila’ is already a spiritual name,” she says.
And “Try meditation and jogging both.”
When we are together we talk
and talk
about The Spirit.
About What is Good and What is Not.
There was a time she applauded my anger,
now she feels it is something I should outgrow.
“It is not a useful emotion,” she says. “And besides,
if you think about it, there’s nothing worth
getting angry about.”
“I do not like anger,” I say.
“It raises my blood pressure.
I do not like violence. So much has been done to me.
But having embraced my complete being
I find anger
and the capacity for violence
within me.
Control
rather than eradication
is about the best
I feel I can do.
Besides, they intend to murder us,
you know.”
“Yes, I understand,” she says.
“But try meditation
and jogging
both
;
you’ll be surprised how calm you feel.”
I meditate, walk briskly, and take deep, deep breaths
for I know the importance of peace to the inner self.
When I talk to Sheila
I am forced to honor
my own ideals.
Surely the earth can be saved for Sheila.
These days I think of Gloria.
“The mere
sight
of an airplane puts me to sleep,”
she says.
Since she is not the pilot, this makes sense.
If this were a courageous country,
it would ask Gloria to lead it
since she is sane and funny and beautiful and smart
and the National Leaders we’ve always had
are not.
When I listen to her talk about women’s rights
children’s rights
men’s rights
I think of the long line of Americans
who should have been president, but weren’t.
Imagine Crazy Horse as president. Sojourner Truth.
John Brown. Harriet Tubman. Black Elk or Geronimo.
Imagine President Martin Luther King confronting
the youthful “Oppie” Oppenheimer. Imagine President
Malcolm X going after the Klan. Imagine President Stevie
Wonder dealing with the “Truly Needy.”
Imagine President Shirley Chisholm, Ron Dellums or
Sweet Honey in the Rock
dealing with Anything.
It is imagining to make us weep with frustration,
as we languish under real estate dealers, killers,
and bad actors.
Gloria makes me aware of how much we lose by denying,
exiling or repressing parts of ourselves
so that other parts,
grotesque and finally lethal
may creep into the light.
“Women must seize the sources of reproduction,” she says,
knowing her Marx and her Sanger too.
Surely the earth can be saved for Gloria.
These days I think of Jan,
who makes the most exquisite goblets
—and plates and casseroles.
Her warm hands steady on the cool
and lively clay,
her body attentive and sure, bending over the wheel.
I could watch her work for hours—
but there is never time. On one visit I see the bags
of clay. The next visit, I see pale and dusty molds,
odd pieces of hardening handles and lids. On another,
I see a stacked kiln. On another, magical objects of use
splashed with blue, streaked with black and red.
She sits quietly beside her creations
at countless fairs
watching without nostalgia
their journeys into the world.
She makes me consider how long
people have been making things. How wise
and thoughtful people often are.
A world without Jan would be like her house
when she is someplace else—gray, and full of furniture
I’ve never seen before.
Our dream is to sit on a ridge top for days
and reminisce
about the anti-nuke movement.
The time we were together
at a women’s music festival, and Diablo Canyon
called her.
The more comic aspects
of her arrest.
There is a way that she says “um
hum
” that means a lot
to me.
Surely the earth can be saved for Jan.
These days I think of Rebecca.
“Mama, are you a racist?” she asks.
And I realize I have badmouthed white people
once too often
in her presence.
Years ago I would have wondered
how white people have managed to live
all these years
with this question
from their children;
or, how did they train their children
not to ask?
Now I think how anti-racism
like civil rights or
affirmative action
helps white people too.
Even if they are killing us
we have to say, to try to believe,
it is the way they are raised,
not genetics,
that causes their bizarre, death-worshiping
behavior.
“If we were raised like white people,
to think we are superior to everything else
God made, we too would behave the way
they do,” say the elders.
And: “White folks could
be
people of color
if they’d only relax.”
Besides, my daughter declares
her own white father “Good,” and reminds me
it is often black men
who menace us on
the street.
Talking to Rebecca about race almost always
guarantees a headache.
But that is a small price
for the insight and clarity
she brings.
Surely the earth can be saved for Rebecca.
These days I think of John, Yoko and Sean Lennon.
Whenever I listen
to “Working-Class Hero,”
I laugh: because John says “fucking”
twice,
and it is always a surprise
though I know the record by heart.
I like to imagine
him putting Sean to bed
or exchanging his own hard,
ass-kicking boots
for sneakers.
I like to imagine Yoko
making this white boy deal with the word
NO
for the first time.
And the word
YES
forever.
I like to think of this brave
and honest
new age family
that dared to sing itself
even as anger, fear, sadness and death
squeezed its vocal cords.
Yoko knows the sounds of a woman coming
are finer by far than those of a B-52
on a bombing raid.
And a Kotex plastered across
a man’s forehead at dinner
can indicate serenity.
Hold on world
World hold on
It’s gonna be all right
You gonna see the light
(Ohh) when you’re one
Really one
You get things done
Like they never been done
So hold on.*
Surely the earth can be saved
by all the people
who insist
on love.
Surely the earth can be saved for us.