Poet, Essayist, Editor & Translator
Political poetry has good and bad to it. Because of the conflicting nature of polics and ethnic identity, the program can shut itself off from many readers who may or may not identity with its values or its import.
"Three days after the election" — which election? The President of the United States is elected, or reelected, every four years. The very nature of the political process ensures that these dynamic changes are not magnetic or tectonic. The Framers did not want the American electorate to tie up their hopes in one man, or in any government. Their final instrument, the Constitution, intended for power to be frustrated in the minds of the few and diffused to the hands of the many.
Frederick Douglass would likely be appalled at such affirmation, or deification. Frederick Douglass was not the self-righteous partisan which modern politics has depicted. The world is spinning away, all right, but more like the "widening and widening in the gyre" foretold by William Butler Yeats in the Second Coming.
Has poetry been reduced to impolitic political soundbytes? Really? Someone need to remind this poety that Douglass was a free-thinking abolitionist, but he would be appalled at the expansive, expensive welfare state which has brought minorities, including blacks, into a different bondage of servitude.
Yes, Douglass fought against Edward Covey, but not because he was a "black" man, but because he was a man made in God's image. He may have been a slave in form, but he was no longer a "slave in fact". He stopped identifying the denigrating slaveowners' depiction of himself.
Labor unions are as cruel, if not as overt, as plantation owners. They take away a man's livelihood with compulsory union dues, then they spend the money on candidates and causes which most of the men and women do not support. It's wage slavocracy, to say the least.
President Obama has subjugated the very Constitution and rule of law which Douglass cherished. This fatuous peaen to race as identity is offensive and effusive in self-congratulatory praise.
Honestly, is there any merit in praising one black President who has done more harm than good to African-American citizens in this country?
There is no stillness, sir. The stillness of a tomb speaks of the only great equalizer, or emancipator, ad that would be Death. Darker than color, the more potent prejudice, which offends man because something deeper than ethnic pride insists that "death is wrong", yet death laughs at the "Black and Brown power" of academic elites and marauding gangs.
Believers in spirits? This poet admitted that he haas not faith in the Divine, but he has faith in the inane notion that a man is defined by the color of his skin. The slave boy was taught to read with the help of a sympathetic white boy in Baltimore, yet I suppose this poet left that white element blank because it does not fit in with the self-glorification of race at the expense of the true spirit of man.
This man prays, but to what? Within himself, like the rich young ruler, or the older one who was rich towards men but poor towards God? The poet is praying to himself, and thus he is praying to no one. With God, nothing is impossible. Without God, without the Divine, there is nothing indeed but an empty tomb.