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Thursday, February 7, 2013

Poem-A-Day: Motown Philly Back Again by Harmony Holiday

by Harmony Holiday
 

We're all pagans and shamans and clap your hands 

   now we won't stop the beat

 

We believe in divine healing and we hate to see that   

   evening sun go down 

 

We know when the sight of our women dressed in white

   each ritual night, is touching, hypnotizes

 

The animals blush and split for us as revival, as revealed

   to themselves

 

These are triumphant women.

 

Even Sister Fame hiding out in the alley turning tricks

   and singing verses from the undid scripture, is touching

 

Thank you jesus, thank you jesus, that you jesus, baby,

   is that you, she mutters up high between rocks

   and lace---his eagerness---it was all night long

 

Sometimes he'd interrupt a recording session to tell us

   about his early Motown days or expand on his views of

   Heaven and Hell

 

One time he was saying how important it was to love

   one's father.

 

Do you love yours? I asked him

 

Why don't you tell him

 

Why don't you tell your father, he said

 

I will if you do

 

You go first

 


Copyright © 2013 by Harmony Holiday. Used with permission of the author.
About this Poem:
 
"'Motown Philly Back Again' is a meditation on some of the myths and legends that pervade the recording industry. It includes some catachresis between Marvin Gaye and myself that helps me explore some nuances of paternity as I've experienced it within the context of black culture. The many hyperlinks embedded in the text explicate more of the associative registers of the poem, which is part of a larger series of meditations on crossings between rituals of worship/devotion, rituals of violence, and rituals of entertainment as they converge and diverge in the role of the arts in the lives of black Americans and also all Americans. That series is called 'Great Day in the Morning' and will be available as a chapbook this year."
 
Harmony Holiday
Poetry by Holiday

Negro League Baseball

Poem-A-Day launched in 2006 and features new and previously unpublished poems by contemporary poets on weekdays and classic poems on weekends. Browse the Poem-A-Day archive.

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February 7, 2013
  
Harmony Holiday is
the author of
Negro League Baseball (Fence Books, 2011), which won the Motherwell Prize. She lives in New York City and is an instructor of dance and writing courses.
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