1182: from “Take Me Back, Burden Hill” by L. Lamar Wilson
1182: from “Take Me Back, Burden Hill” by L. Lamar Wilson
Transcript
I’m Major Jackson, and this is The Slowdown.
What do you do when you have lost your way? What are the songs you hum that a treasured elder once sang? What are the questions that anchor your existence, that you keep returning to? What keeps you awake to the world?
Humans, it seems, are bound to feel adrift. So many times in my life, I have worked to muster a belief that all of it matters. I have made great efforts to not be lulled into amnesia nor medicate myself blind to the forces that harm — and to those that truly heal. Living a spiritual existence means developing strategies that keep us in possession of ourselves, ever aware that we share this fragile world.
Today’s poem works the energy of the vernacular, of folkways, of leaning into one’s people as the balm and crux of their humanity.
from “Take Me Back, Burden Hill”
by L. Lamar Wilson
Take me back to the homesteaders who pronounce poem & perm The same & know neither take too well watered or weighted down. To those who teach the difference between wahoos & no-hows & haints & t’ain’t no body’s beast or business or property no mo’. To endless back roads, verdant & muddy. To racing waist-deep In fields of wildflowers & corn stalks as tall as your big brother’s crown & Verily, I say, & because I say, so it is. To fields of blinding white & Chiggers & bolls that burrow deep in soil richer & veined & reddened By all those black, bruised palms’ blood. To never will I pick again. To Melons & peanuts & as many hogs & heads of cattle as our pennies & prayers can feed. To knowing when to slaughter & what To keep. To knowing where to hide the blade, who not to tell. To Mrs. Mable’s snuff-mucked mouth & her darlin’ Ben, to Mack & Nellie & they ol’ mule Sally’s slack back breaking wind. To Sister Lola’s man’s astigmatism. Uncle Willis’ crossed legs & arms belying memories of a rifle, his right hand unflinching In salute, winning the Battle of the Bulge I never will. To Miss Lou Mamie convulsing, then giving up the right for the wrong Right there, finally, in the choir stand, where Grandpa Roy & Grandma Noretha keep time at the Hammond & Console, Ruby-throated tenor & contralto entwined across a space vast As the two-room shanty where they will make the restless boy Who will make me, whose hearts stopped ‘fo’ I could lay on They chests & listen. To unsteady as this fraught rhyme reaching, Reaching, echoing the murmur they gifted him & me, they baby Boygirl. Take me back to the original question, which enters This room’s crooked lines long before you with your morning Coffee or fresh blend of tinctures, teas or spirits: What must I do to be saved from myself now? What you got to take away This plague’s unyielding ache? I’m nobody’s savior, Nicodemus, but Come here. Hear them. In my dreams, these & a few others await: Always alive, hear them rocking a stain-glassed house of pews, Blues creaking in sync, brows & arms aloft, hands caressing Oaken divets on the quaking boards’ floors & collicky babies’ Backs in brokenhearted girls’ arms & laps. Let us kneel, faces flat, Fingers flexed, nostrils becking Pine-Sol to cleanse every crevice It can reach, backs arched, conjuring bolts of holy heat No unnatural flesh, unmoved, can stand. Come on, ̶J̶e̶s̶u̶s̶ A̶l̶l̶a̶h̶ A̶m̶m̶a̶. Anyone Listening? Take us down, down into These plantations’ mire, believing in ussin the only way beyond through To ours. There, Thomas’ dubious gaze will mirror mine, help us Cross in a calm time. Rest our thorny sides in its briar patch, thatch A home from its scrapyards’ booty, undulate real proper like, loose Our selves in this shifty baldachin’s ready sway. I’ll go, I cried all Those years ago. Send me. But I’m so tired, all cried out, so take Me back to this nowhere town, where we can lay our burdens down.
"From 'Take Me Back, Burden Hill' ” by L. Lamar Wilson. Used by permission of the poet.