We’re living through a period of momentous upheaval in the United States, walking through the gates of history. This is the second installment of my Poetry of Witness series, by which I seek to chronicle the unique promise, perils, and potentials of this time.
$750
9.28.20
Give unto Caesar what is Caesar’s,
they said, so that’s what we did—
a buck over minimum
and happy to have it, I remember,
that job in the café where
I was working when the Twin Towers fell,
perfecting the over easy,
the splash of vinegar in the roiling boil.
Back then every paycheck
was a mystery to me, the way
so much of what little I made
had disappeared by the time
I was paid.
These days,
the tax I pay comes to four figures each quarter
while for the last fifteen years, the president
has paid only twice, the last time a total of
$750. It figures, doesn’t it,
that Caesar’s Palace is the sort of
place where we’re playing,
flushing away our cash
for the greater good
of Nero’s golden thrones.
I mean,
you have to hand it to him—
your money or your life
or, both, I suppose,
if your labor is deemed essential
but you yourself are not.
—
The Invitation
10.12.20
In the in between we hold a seat for hope
but set a place at the table for
intuition disguised as fear
and vain imaginings of the status quo
as preferable to
the change that hurts and heals. One day I know,
we will find ourselves on the other side
of all of this—one day we’ll look up
and realize that a great change has come
in a series of
extremely minor moves,
that it wasn’t the way we
elected our leaders but the way we ourselves
began to lead. Today
I’m writing letters, researching ballot measures,
writing poetry, voting by mail.
Nothing big.
Nothing small.
—
Savage
10.15.20
Symbolic maybe but physical
in fact, the monument
to the “heroes who have fallen
in the various battles with
___________ Indians
in the territory of New Mexico,”
which stood for two hundred years
in the plaza of old Santa Fe
today
has fallen
today, in truth of fact,
people have seized the power
to change not just the present and the future
but the past.
No matter how long that lie stood
in plain sight among us,
as families gathered in the evenings
as the violinist played her sweet lament
as the man who takes photographs of old churches
sold them to tourists
those ______________ Indians
gathered at the Palace of the Governors
to sell their fine handcrafts
did not relent, even after they were forced
to roll up their blankets, the white numbers of their spots
still clear on the bricks out front
even as their elders
were cut down by Covid,
as the white settlers spread
their diseases like blankets over the earth.
A _____________ act, in truth of fact
and though it’s just a word someone
painstakingly chipped away, some time ago now,
its erasure served to remind us all
of the resistance required, the patience,
to topple such a tall lie, of such long standing
and reclaim the heart of the commons,
waiting now its
next testament.
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