Requiem (for Aralee Strange, not to mention what used to be her neighborhood-and-home)
I went there,
just down the block from where she’d lived for,
well,
almost the whole time I knew her.
Wasn’t easy, but I did it.
They’d asked me to read one of her poems
– that’d be the easy part –
and maybe say a word or two
– that’d be the hard part.
Like I said,
it wasn’t easy, but I did it.
All I had to do was put her poems in my pocket
– that’d be the easy part –
take a shortish bus ride down to town
and,
with those pieces of the past in my pocket,
walk through the present,
by which I mean
the gentrified,
totally flipped,
boutiqued,
white folks’ heaven of a lived-in destination
that keeps on marching around
like some kind of
newfangled
palace guard
in the place where her
so preciously affordable and oh-so-vibrantly diversified
neighborhood
used to stand on the corner and smile
– that’d be the hard part.
Wasn’t easy, but I did it.
Sat,
listened some,
scribbled some,
walked to the stage,
pulled
the past-that-I-still-wished-would-be-our-future
out of my pocket,
unfolded it,
and read for a bit
– that’d be the easy part –
and then I took the present out,
as if it were some kind of
unlicensed,
untrained,
uninsured,
but trust-me-it’s-totally-legal
concealed carry of a flagrantly tossed-off poem.
Yep,
the one I’d rudely written while other folx were reading
– that’d be the hard part
‘cause I don’t like it when I‘m rude –
and this
is what I read,
“In another time and place
but in-this-room-this-very-room,
Roscoe Morgan,
Senior,
quit pickin’ in the middle of a song,
brought his right hand to his mouth
as if
by accident
he had spit the lyrics out between his teeth
and was stuffing them back in.
Rubbed that hand across his upper lip.
Looked at it.
Then
‘Sorry, folks,’ he said,
‘thought my nose was bleedin’,
but it snot.’”
And then
“Oh, Aralee,”
I said,
“I miss this neighborhood almost as much as I miss you,
especially when I’m in it.”
3 thoughts on "Requiem (for Aralee Strange, not to mention what used to be her neighborhood-and-home)"
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One of my favorites this month! Thank you for sharing.
My wife, who’s from Cincy, the old part. misted up a bit when I read this to her. “That’s OTR” she said from her perspective of having lived in a tumble down in Clifton. It’s mostly gone now and each visit more is gone and then more…
As a friend of Aralee and former OTR dweĺler…thanks for the twin tribute.