I Make Promises
Before I Dream
No unclaimed, cremated mothers this year
Nor collateral white skin
No mothers folding clothes to a corporate park preamble
No sons singing under the bright lights of a lumber yard
Quantum reaganomics and the tap steps of turning on a friend
New York trophy parts among
the limbs of decent people
Being an enraged
artist is like
entering a room
and not knowing what to get high off of
My formative symbols/My
upbringing flying to an agent’s ears
I might as well be an
activist
Called my girlfriend
and described
All the bottles
segregationists had thrown at me that day
Described recent blues
sites and soothing prosecutions
I feared for my poetry
You have to make art every once in a while
While in the
company of sell-outs
Accountant
books in deified bulk
Or while
waiting for a girl under a modern chandelier
Or in your last lobby as a
wanderer
The prison foot races
the museum
My instrument ends
I mean, what is a
calendar to the slave?
Also, what is a
crystal prism?
“He bought this bullet,
bought its flight,
then bought two more”
The Cycle of Black
Mercy
Well I have at least fallen around love
Reading poems next to my friend with Loisaida fire escapes
in their teeth
Talking about the gun I’m going to bring to the segregation
Trying to protect children with poems/protect these store-runs
Avenue nights as a hospital bard
I can’t make out the system of craft
Is this run the house dust circuit/are these abandoned
houses of various rank
art here like karma-less soldiering
Falsifying my first solo on this stage/ on this rickety
enemy-ness
Ladies and Gentlemen, here to make some warmongering of
your night
these receipt paper poems
Adorning my red eyes with a self-inflicted fatherhood
Over-policed eyes
state impressionism bouncing back and forth between skin
and ski mask
an emotional range or wobbly self-portrait
amongst these church giants
calcified personas present /grown man depression
scraping cotton against uptown silhouettes/see in their
shadows all manner of bombs
king of the poems, baby
genuine marvel of the history of poems
welcome to the mild bourgeoise
revolution street fairs/our weariness
well-proven socialism/ the death of both your and my
hip-hop, Lord
make your green back ruling class confetti/art somewhere in
this
earn stripes with three hands/cut God off of your shirt
look out at the world from the inside of an ink stroke
I don’t mind the Mississippi steel, sir, but may I have a
saxophone from a different city
bright lights/lethal injection routine/last words/Is My
Family Here
take all disrespect as the universe in motion
I write poems today
I kill america today
five-year anniversary of my style
(swamps talking/ midsize
activist files like songs sitting under the street/
Slave castles growing and growing/
keeping notebooks
alive the wrong way/
human temper
sitting still)
going to Afrika in mysterious ways
the harp that turned the hand toward the Founding of Chicago
you know what my trick is, grandson?
I am weak first
Before anything, I first become weak
Kick a hatchet down the street/ then all around a city
a grandmother’s Milwaukee
or the gods my grandmother robbed
fresh faces in the spirit house/ a spirit house we’ve put
behind the sun
We have God’s permission to make a plan
Gradually, the poem becomes decently empty
You know, be weak
Let the ability to write slip
until only one fingertip
is left on the handle
then, in a flash, return
with a slave castle in a cup of change
“Lady’s and gentlemen:
We assure you that tonight’s entertainment is not judging
you…We paid them…really well”
Free Fear
The boss belongs to the masses now
Got the boss’ likeness on a string like a love poem
Wild stride speeches replace memories of the boss
We got machine guns in the communist bar tonight
We are naturals in the communist bar
Our boundaries are just a little death
We stand outside the gates of San Francisco
listening to some good
preaching
“Congratulations, your
mercenaries hurt.
Your Money Jungle
hurts. Your mouths hurt.”
“Merchants of frenetic
white flight
Luckless and
(therefore) well-armed primitivism
Reaching down into the
patterns of your soul
Making for funny
stories”
“I hope they didn’t
name any schools
While they had those
kids in those cages”
Joy returns to decent revolutionaries
Puts a hermitage
in the fascism
Saint Faluja thumping, your shoulder is family
and needed
God crawling in between the bullet heat
Yes, our grandparents’ God
Thought experiments in the last words of Black organizers
Let’s make a
periodical of their last words, Lord
Of the remaining
addresses of Black power
We become Angola on both sides/A humor of axes.
A foot race through public property/remilitarized
Pork improved/Celestial pork
Platinum minted pork/choose your words carefully pork
“the first mirror was
clay…the first human was not”
Humanity recommencing
near the weight pile
(would be nice to sound
universal)
not
heroin owed
heroin
passing messages
heroin
left laying around an empire
A colonized
intellectual as a guest
in their own hand
It’s like a life’s work
depends
On replicating
Birmingham caravans
Or particulate
Birmingham
One to five shells flying
at the state capital
Signed, “Thank you for
the resources”
big band scatting up the throat of a surrogate fascist
in love with their one eye ball
at the parade with tuxedo-colored guns
marrying the cowardice
A re-running white politician
Is born in a Black neighborhood (taken as a stage of
history)
Born of a Black Messiah (taken as a foco-biography)
Is born Black (journey’d)
Legislates in some
dimension fused to the side of loud steps
copper summer riots, but still some blood involved
still some necessary slums involved
rag tag armies masked in western height/ in primary emotions
Delight of cocaine both warped and not warped enough/images
can be cousins
What happens when you step outside the country’s sugar
gorging?
What good are you all to the world sitting in Heaven?
Who are we going to lay out books for?
Who’s going to touch the knives at night and sing to the
gaps in between shadows…gaps between our love?
Who is going to teach our knives to sing Tobacco Road
Teach them that they are family
Picture a Black socialist in a perfected boneyard
in a tributary boneyard
whispering to cheek bones
dimming the wind
A Black socialist who will live for one hundred years in
this graveyard to make this point/that we’re in too much pain for naming
ceremonies... that ancestors need to inflict on the world our continuity...
A thousand good deeds decorate the 20-year police precinct
janitor
A janitor (who called it)…who knee-slides, but not like you
Telling you of a half-dead humanism to pass the time
A math teacher and their little red book
“I used to dream of revolution… and even enjoy the dream”
Tongo Eisen-Martin is the Poet Laureate of San Francisco, California. He is the author of Heaven Is All Goodbyes (City Lights Books, 2017), which was shortlisted for the Griffin International Poetry Prize, received the California Book Award for Poetry, an American Book Award, and a PEN Oakland Book Award. He is also the author of someone's dead already (Bootstrap Press, 2015). Blood on the Fog is his new collection of poems.