from “Urban Renewal” [by Major Jackson]

Major Jackson 2

from Urban Renewal

XVI.

What of my fourth grade teacher at Reynolds Elementary,

who weary after failed attempts to set to memory

names strange and meaningless as grains of dirt around

the mouthless, mountain caves at Bahrain Karai:

Tarik, Shanequa, Amari, Aisha, nicknamed the entire class

after French painters whether boy or girl. Behold

the beginning of sentient formless life. And so,

my best friend Darnell became Marcel, and Tee_tee

was Braque, and Stacy James was Fragonard,

and I, Eduard Charlemont. The time has come to look

at these signs from another point of view. Days passed

in inactivity before I corrected her, for Eduard was

Austrian and painted the black chief in a palace in 1878

to the question whether intelligence exists. All of Europe

swooned to Venus of Willendorf. Outside her tongue,

yet of it, in textbooks Herodotus tells us of the legend

of Sewosret (Seosteris I, II, or III), the colonizer of Greece,

founder of Athens. What’s in a name? Sagas rise and

fall in the orbs of jumpropes, Hannibal grasps a Roman

monkeybar on history’s rung, and the mighty heroes at recess

lay dead in woe on the imagined battlefields of Halo.

from The Best American Poetry 1994

guest editor Lyn Hejinian

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Author: The Best American Poetry