Brown             for my mother     The scrolled brown arms
             of the church pews curve
 like a bone—their backs  
 bend us upright, standing
             as the choir enters
       singing, 
We’ve come this far    by faith—the steps
             & sway of maroon robes,
       hands clap like a heart  
 in its chest—
leaning             on the Lord—       this morning’s program  
 still warm
             from the mimeo machine
       quick becomes a fan.  
 In the vestibule latecomers
             wait just outside
       the music—the river   
 we crossed
             to get here—
 wide boulevards now   
 *    
 in disrepair.
 We’re watched over
       in the antechamber  
 by Rev.
       Oliver Brown, 
 his small, colored picture  
 nailed slanted
 to the wall—former
pastor of St. Mark’s   
 who marched
 into that principal’s office
       in Topeka to ask   
 why can’t my daughter
 school here, just
 steps from our house—  
 but well knew the answer—
 & Little Linda
 became an idea, became more  
 what we needed & not
             a girl no more—
Free-dom       Free-dom—   *    
 Now meant
             sit-ins & 
I shall I shall  I shall not be   moved— & four little girls bombed
 into tomorrow  
 in a church basement like ours
 where nursing mothers & children
 not ready to sit still  
 learned to walk—Sunday school 
 sent into pieces
 & our arms.             
 We are 
 swaying more
 now, entering  
 heaven’s rolls—the second row
             behind the widows
 in their feathery hats  
 & empty nests, heads heavy
       but not hearts 
Amen. The all-white  
 *    
 stretchy, scratchy dresses 
             of the missionaries—
 the hatless holy who pin lace  
 to their hair—bowing
             down into pocketbooks
 opened for the Lord, then  
 snapped shut 
 like a child’s mouth
 mouthing off, which just  
 one glare from an elder
             could close.
 God’s eyes must be  
 like these—aimed
             at the back row 
 where boys pass jokes   
 & glances, where Great 
 Aunts keep watch,
 their hair shiny  
 as our shoes
             &, as of yesterday,
 just as new—     
 *   
 chemical curls & lop-
             sided wigs—humming
       during offering 
  Oh my Lord             Oh my Lordy       What can I do.   The pews curve like ribs
             broken, barely healed,
       & we can feel   
 ourselves breathe—
 while Mrs. Linda Brown
 Thompson, married now, hymns  
 piano behind her solo—
 No finer noise
       than this—  
 We sing
 along, or behind, 
       mouth most   
 every word—following 
 her grown, glory voice,
       the black notes    
 *    
 rising like we do—
             like Deacon
       Coleman who my mother  
 always called 
Mister—
             who’d help her
       weekends & last  
 I saw him my mother
             offered him
 a slice of sweet potato  
 pie as payment—
             or was it apple—
       he’d take no money  
 barely said
             Yes, only       
I could stay   for a piece—
             trim as his grey
       moustache, he ate  
 with what I can only
             call dignity—
       fork gently placed   
  * 
    across his emptied plate.
             Afterward, full, 
      Mr. Coleman’s 
That’s nice   meant wonder, meant 
 the world entire.
       Within a year cancer  
 had eaten him away—
 the only hint of it
 this bitter taste for a whole  
 year in his mouth. 
The resurrection             and the light.       For now he’s still             
 standing down front, waiting
 at the altar for anyone 
 to accept the Lord, rise  
 & he’ll meet you halfway
 & help you down
       the aisle—  
 legs grown weak— 
 As it was in the beginning Is now   *   
And ever shall be— All this tuning
       & tithing. We offer  
 our voices up 
 toward the windows
 whose glass I knew  
 as colored, not stained—
 our backs
 made upright not by  
 the pews alone—
 the brown         
 wood smooth, scrolled  
 arms grown
             warm with wear—
 & prayer—   
Tell your neighbor             next to you you love them—till   
 we exit
 into the brightness 
 beyond the doors.								
									 Copyright © 2018 by Kevin Young. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.