White-blossoming trees
In front of the house
In Sparta, Georgia,
Where they together lived:
Free woman of color
(black, white, Cherokee),
white male slaver,
and their children
who slept with the mother
in a mouse room connected
to his rooms through secret doors.
He gave his daughters diamonds
Which they wore set in rings
On their toes, and hid in their hair.
Distant white relatives
fought for the railroad stock
when he died, and they won.
They also got the house.
You can smell the funk
Of the haints in the walls:
Mildew, semen, camphor,
Oft-handled bills, coin metal,
Cornbread breath that whispers
and swallows and breathes.
One day, as in the best
bodice-rippers, the house
burned down to the ground,
burnt down by the distant white cousin
who no doubt heard the ghosts
humming and fussing, rattling,
ratcheting, singing. Burn!
she screamed. So it did.
The fussing quieted. In its place,
Wind in the willows, a whiff of
something sweet, something sour,
something always in its place.
Published in American Sublime (Minneapolis: Graywolf Press, 2005).
© 2009 Elizabeth Alexander and Southern Spaces