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The Great Mirror of Same-Sex Love - Poetry - 58. “…words from the outside…”
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“…words from the outside…”
Assumption About the Harlem Brown Baby
Do not assume I came out on Christopher Street
as the piers and track began to heat and dance in the night
I came out fifteen in the streets of Harlem and South Bronx
On rooftop jungles . . . pulling tigers and leopards to my rhythmic past
Spurting . . . spurting fountains . . . and baking bread never laid . . . upon the table.
Never laid upon the table before any human’s hands . . . mouths . . . dragon unasleep
It was a natural . . . a raw kind of primitive dance . . . it was my ritualistic dance
into manhood . . . into the passage of blood sung in Benin linguistic breathing patterns
Breathing . . . breathing down my neck . . . breathing in my face
Between the cries of baby this and that . . . and feelings
of being good . . . of ooh I feel good!
And back then I was Eschu . . . the trickster . . . a chameleon
in my identity . . . I played the butch-queen games well
For the period of blood can be a time of confusion . . .
Of direct lines between straight and narrow paths not taken
But the lullabies of night remembered on roofs . . .
Was knocking at my door . . . and the Black and Latin men
made love to those nights so long ago were calling
I came . . . and came again to the hallways . . . and Mt. Morris Park
To sing the song of the bushes in black heat . . . black heat rising
rising in my eyes . . . rising in your eyes . . . your eyes piercing my eyes
in unison . . . the stars now fall and shoot themselves . . .
from our scepters held to the morning sun . . . rising . . . rising . . . rising . . .
And do not assume . . . you . . . my friend
that the first bars I went to were Gay
and had men posing as wax barbie dolls
and twisted G.I. joes
The first bars that I went to find a man
was mixed and three-fourth straight
And the first man I walked out with . . .
had a thirty-eight between his belt
And a road called “sudden paradise”
He was a dope dealer . . . he was a saint
a devil in disguise . . . and he taught me to bleed
at sixteen . . . with the first heart broken
I did go to Gay bars later . . . back then . . . the bars
that spoke the words from the outside “Black Only”
Whites who come in . . . come in at your own risk
And in those places . . . the queens and the drags were respected
and sometime feared . . . they were the ones that kept the place together
And if someone wanted to play the macho butch and read
they would make sure . . . they could not sow future seeds
They were no slouch these queens
They carried blades and guns filled with lead
Go off wrong with them . . . you were dead!
And when I came out . . . there were no definite Gay codes of dress
When got you from A to Z with a man was whether you had nice labels
or looked street cool . . . not whether you were a cowboy or leatherman
or even showing half of your can . . . if you did the queens would look
and read you as being a desperate man
So do not assume that I was some Harlem brown baby
that came out in your world . . . your ghetto . . . your constructs
of your reality . . . I came out in my own
Knowing the even flow to life . . . knowing which cards
had been marked and played . . . the sea . . . the sea
is now at rest . . . fill your bowels of passion with my wisdom
—Salih Michael Fisher, [i]
1983
[i] “…words from the outside…” Salih Michael Fisher “Assumption About the Harlem Brown Baby,” reprinted in Gay and Lesbian Poetry in our Time [Carl Morse and Joan Larkin, Editors] (New York 1988), ps. 112-113
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Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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