Robin Coste Lewis
While watching
a movie

with a lovely, unyielding,
Well-founded black female

Character, the ten-year-old
Says, Mom, I love

How fierce
Black people are.

He's read thirty-six graphic
Novels in two days.

(I don't know how
To parent him.

I only know how
To protect him.)

My intestines gorge red.
Warm. I smile at him. Pretend

I don't feel this green leaf of relief, a leaf
Because he's managed somehow

Not to hate himself. Me.
A girl's neck was slit

Yesterday. Everyday.
We watch her die

On the platform.
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image of portrait of William Blake
William Blake, Radical Abolitionist
 

"His abolitionism was a given, but his understanding of emancipation extended in even more radical directions than other Enlightenment thinkers whose rationality Blake found oppressive, intoning that 'Prisons are built with stones of law.' Where the Enlightenment promoted rationality, Blake embraced mysticism; if the philosophes celebrated science, then Blake advocated visionary ecstasy."

via JSTOR DAILY 
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Eric Pankeys handwritten version of 'When You Go Away"

"The premise of 'When You Go Away,' is familiar: when the lover is separated from the beloved, the order of the world changes. Given the limits of this conventional subject, how did Merwin make a thing both faithful to its convention and new? I found an answer to my question in the complexity of the poem’s final lines: 'my words are the garment of what I shall never be / Like the tucked sleeve of a one-armed boy.'"

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