Up from Red Soil

 
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BY BENJAMIN UEL MARSH

I’m from an old place

where no one forgets the past, out of fear

of losing the present.

Fragments from history are the corner stone

of our modern structures. Old wood forms a new desk over which

I scatter my current endeavors.

I’m from a place of shade

where children hide in the summer woods

with bowing arrows bonded from their mother’s thread.

Where a backyard is a battle field and pine cones are grenades.

A place of twisters and thunderstorm,

bright flashes and rumbling booms. Good Jesus,

I miss the rain.

 

I’m from a place of deep roots,

of Black Origin, descendent of dark driftwood

mangled by mannish tides. Africa is lost.

I’m from a place that tested a nation’s resolve.

From which rebels marched to maintain a maliciously lucrative industry.

Where my great great grandmother spent her sweet sixteen lost

in the phonetic features of a presidential proclamation;

free at last.

I’m from a place built on red earth with sturdy steel,

while Liberty was reconstructed. 

Built right up, by men who look like my father, and Anglo-immigrants

just trying to sketch a dream with southern coal.

 

Where Jim Crow was born from the heads of stagnant adults

and buried under the soles of stomping children. That place,

presumed guilty because of its brutal past, the American story

disguised as a Southern narrative.

That place, from which Black men moved on,

to stop being boys and mature to adolescence.

 

I’m from a landlocked island, where good people approach your soul

but trip up on your skin,

where the institution of racism lies in rubble,

yet the dust still suffocates and separates;

you still don’t see me.

 

I’m from a place of worship, where God reigns

and churches blend

among homes as natural fixtures of life.

Where you can be sized up by the pew in which you sit.

Where preaching is the headliner and

the choir is just spiritual pre-gaming.

 

I’m from a small place

where the Other lives over the mountain,

and we struggle in the valley.

Where the money is tight as a mother’s hug,

where dreams are not lost but never dreamt.

A place where fathers fall short, and mothers

make due; there is no luck, only Faith and only Work.

 

Yet, I am from a place of joy;

instigated by good food, good folks, and the Father’s Grace.

I’m from that place,

Pittsburg’s younger sister,

who grew up so quick they called her magic.

I’m from a Tuxedo Junction, jazz note

played long and loud.

From a Livingston slave, and a deferred dream

that came to fruition in generational steps.

 

I am from that place where the past is not forgotten,

because the present sits on a foundation

of vintage steel, tattered cotton, and cultural conflict.

The topography

still bears the names of its former residents, and the current tenants

fight old ghost for new life.

 

I am from that place, that I have never forgotten;

it props up my present, because my past is too implanted in that red soil

to ever be uprooted.


Benjamin Uel Marsh is an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Tampa. He was born and raised in Birmingham, Alabama and began writing poetry in high school. As an undergraduate at Birmingham-Southern college, he founded a poetry organization where his love of recording thoughts in creative verse flourished.