The Ten Commandments
The Ten Commandments Jericho Brown But I could be covetous. I could be a thief. Could want and work for. Could wire and Deceive. I thought to fool the moon into A doubt. I did some doubting. Lord, Forgive me. In New Orleans that winter, I waited for a woman to find me shirtless On her back porch. Why? She meant it Rhetorically and hit me with open hands. How many times can a woman say why With her hands in the moonlight? I counted Ten like light breaking hard on my head, Ten rhetorical whys and half a moon. Half- Nude, I let her light into me. I could be last On a list of lovers Joe Adams would see, And first to find his wife slapping the spit Out of me. I could be sick and sullen. I could Sulk and sigh. I could be a novel character By E. Lynn Harris, but even he'd allow me Some dignity. He loved black people too Much to write about a wife whipping her rival On a night people in Louisiana call cold. He'd have Joe Adams run out back and pull Her off of me. He wouldn't think I deserved it. |