Read The Collected Poetry of Nikki Giovanni Online
Authors: Nikki Giovanni
L. 44: “betty shabazz”: Hajj Bahiyah Betty Shabazz (1936â97), educator and widow of Macolm X, later Al Hajj Malik Al-Shabazz (1925â65).
L. 50: “no more forget that staccato”: Betty Shabazz witnessed
her husband's assassination, which happened in view of a large audience at New York's Audubon Ballroom.
L. 52: “jonathan's faceâ¦george's letters”: Jonathan and George Jackson.
Ll. 54â55: “Beverly/axelrod”: Beverly Axelrod (1924â2002) was an activist and lawyer whose most famous clients were the Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver and Jerry Rubin, cofounder of the Youth International Party.
L. 57: “water and sky and paris”: Possibly a reference to the fact that Davis had spent her junior year (as a student at Brandeis University) abroad, studying at the Sorbonne.
L. 59: “a german?”: Possibly a reference to Davis's graduate study (1965â67) at the Johann Wolfgang von Goethe University in Frankfurt, Germany.
L. 97: “i went communist”: Davis joined the Communist Party on June 22, 1968.
L. 99: “why howard johnson's”: During her two months of hiding, Davis stayed at a Howard Johnson's motel in New York City.
L. 120: “harriet tubman”: Harriet Tubman (c. 1820â1913) was the most famous conductor on the Underground Railroad. Her numerous forays into the slave states to help slaves escape made her indeed “the first/WANTED Black woman.”
L. 124: “but my helpers trapped me”: Davis's companion while she was hiding proved to be a police officer.
“A Poem for langston hughes”
This poem was originally written for
USA Today,
in which it was published August 29, 1991.
“But Since You Finally Asked (A Poem Commemorating the 10th Anniversary of the Slave Memorial at Mount Vernon)”
This poem was written in 1993.
Stanza 1: “Jamestownâ¦in 1619”: The first African settlersânumbering twentyâin North America arrived on August 20, 1619, in Jamestown, Virginia, where they were exchanged by the Dutch ship's captain for food.
“Stardate Number 18628.190”
This poem was originally published as “Light the Candles” in
Essence
magazine's twenty-fifth anniversary issue, May 1995.
Stanza 3: “Precious Lordâ¦take my hand”: Classic gospel song written in 1938 by Thomas A. Dorsey.
Stanza 3: “Amazing Grace”: Well-known song written by a former slave ship captain.
Stanza 3: “Go down, Moses”: Well-known slave spiritual.
Stanza 3: “Marion Anderson”: Marian Anderson (1900â1993), a Philadelphia-born singer, the first African American to perform at the Metropolitan Opera. In 1939 she drew national attention when the Daughters of the American Revolution denied her request to sing in Constitution Hallâbecause she was Black. Eleanor Roosevelt, then wife of the U.S. president, resigned from the DAR in protest. Subsequently Marian Anderson sang in front of the Lincoln Memorial on Easter Sunday, to an audience of 75,000 people.
Stanza 3: “Leontyne”: Leontyne Price (1927â) is an internationally recognized diva whose opera career blossomed in the 1950s.
Stanza 3: “Battle”: Kathleen Battle (1948â) is a soprano who has appeared at most of the world's major opera houses.
Stanza 3: “Bessie”: Bessie Smith (1894â37), “Empress of the Blues.”
Stanza 3: “Dinah Washington”: Dinah Washington (1924â63), one of the great blues singers.
Stanza 3: “Etta James saying At Last”: Etta James (1938â) is a rhythm and blues singer whose career peaked in the 1950s and 1960s; one of her early albums is entitled
At Last.
Stanza 4: “This is a bus seat”: An allusion to Rosa Parks (1913â). See note to “Harvest,”.
Stanza 4: “telling young Alex”: An allusion to Alex Haley (1921â92), who first heard of his African ancestors through storytelling sessions on long summer nights in Tennessee.
Stanza 6: “CC Riders”: “C. C. Rider” is the title of an old folk song that was transformed into a blues song.
Stanza 7: “Peter Salem and Peter Poor”: Giovanni means Peter Salem (1750?â1816) and Salem Poor (dates uncertain), both African American heroes in the Revolutionary War Battle of Bunker Hill. Peter Salem is credited with killing Major John Pit-cairn. Salem Poor is credited with killing Lieutenant Colonel James Abercrombie; he was cited for heroism by some fourteen officers.
Stanza 7: “the 54th Regiment from Massachusetts”: This all-Black Civil War regiment demonstrated unsurpassed courage in its unsuccessful assault on Confederate forces at Fort Wagner in 1863. The regiment is the subject of the 1989 film
Glory.
Stanza 7: “Emmett Till”: Emmett Louis Till (1941â55). See note to “Lorraine Hansberry,”.
Stanza 7: “Medgar Evers”: Medgar Wiley Evers (1925â63), Civil Rights activist and Mississippi field secretary for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), was murdered in the doorway of his home in Jackson, Mississippi, on June 12, 1963.
Stanza 7: “Malcolm X”: Malcolm X, later Al Hajj Malik Al-Shabazz (1925â65), was assassinated on February 21, 1965, at the Audubon Ballroom in New York City.
Stanza 7: “Martin Luther King, Jr.”: Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929â68) was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee, on April 4, 1968.
“BROTHER BROTHER BROTHER (the Isley Brothers of Lincoln Heights)”
The Isley Brothers, whose father was a professional singer and mother was a pianist, began singing together in the 1950s. Initially there were four brothers: O'Kelly (1937â86), Rudolph (1939â), Ronald (1941â), and Vernon (?â1954), but the core of the group consisted of three after Vernon was killed in an automobile accident. In the mid-1960s, they were joined by their younger brothers Ernie and Marvin and their cousin Chris Jasper.
Stanza 2: “into the Valley”: Suburban area north of Cincinnati.
Stanza 4: “progress is the most important product”: Advertising slogan used by General Electric.
Stanza 7: “perfecting
SHOUT
”: “Shout,” a soul music single reflecting gospel roots, was released in 1959 and brought national attention to the group.
Stanza 8: “Joey Dee”: Joey Dee and the Starlighters were a white rock and roll group that had two huge hits, “Peppermint Twist” and “ShoutâPart 1.”
Note: Entries in this index, carried over verbatim from the print edition of this title, are unlikely to correspond to the pagination of any given e-book reader. However, entries in this index, and other terms, may be easily located by using the search feature of your e-book reader.
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Adulthood,
62
Adulthood II,
260
Africa,
215
Africa I,
176
Africa II,
177
Age,
250
Alabama Poem,
120
All I Gotta Do,
111
Alone,
96
Always There Are the Children,
223
And Another Thing,
189
And Sometimes I Sit,
138
Atrocities,
182
Autumn Poems,
99
Â
Balances,
81
Beautiful Black Men,
70
Because,
253
Beep Beep Poem, The,
272
Being and Nothingness,
292
Black Judgements,
88
Black Power,
34
Black Separatism,
15
Boxes,
240
Brother Brother Brother,
361
But Since You Finally Asked,
357
Butterfly, The,
155
Â
Cancers,
339
Categories,
165
Certain Peace, A,
158
Charles White,
316
Charting the Night Winds,
299
Choices,
269
Communication,
206
Concerning One Responsible Negro with Too Much Power,
47
Conversation,
149
Cotton Candy on a Rainy Day,
227
Crutches,
238
Cultural Awareness,
79
Cyclops in the Ocean, The,
326
Â
Dance Committee, The,
39
December of My Springs, The,
202
Detroit Conference of Unity and Art,
3
Dreams,
67
Drum, The,
318
Â
Each Sunday,
200
Eagles,
320
Ego Tripping,
125
Ever Want To Crawl,
140
Â
Fascinations,
264
Fishy Poem, A,
147
Flying Underground,
321
For A Lady of Pleasure Now Retired,
116
For An Intellectual Audience,
33
For a Poet I Know,
82
Forced Retirement,
232
For Gwendolyn Brooks,
99
For Harold Logan,
93
For Saundra,
80
For Teresa,
84
For Tommy,
91
For Two Jameses (Ballantine and Snow) In iron cells,
97
From a Logical Point of View,
64
Funeral of Martin Luther King, Jr., The,
51
Â
Game Of Game, The,
113
Genie in the Jar, The,
110
Great Pax Whitie, The,
54
Gus,
266
Â
Habits,
262
Hampton, Virginia,
209
Hands: For Mother's Day,
304
Harvest,
327
Her Cruising Car,
322
Historical Footnote to Consider Only When All Else Fails, A,
16
Housecleaning,
102
How Do You Write A Poem?,
136
Â
I Am She,
342
I Laughed When I Wrote It,
185
I'm Not Lonely,
30
Intellectualism,
57
Introspection,
230
I Remember,
156
I Want To Sing,
139
I Wrote a Good Omelet,
337
Â
Journey, A,
333
Just a New York Poem,
161
Â
Kidnap Poem,
109
Knoxville, Tennessee,
59
Â
Laws of Motion, The,
211
Legacies,
143
Letter to a Bourgeois Friend Whom Once I Loved,
27
Life Cycles,
258
Life I Led, The,
203
Linkage,
313
Lion in Daniel's Den, The,
115
Litany for Peppe, A,
52
Lorraine Hansberry: An Emotional View,
301
Love: Is a Human Condition,
331
Love Poem,
31
Love Thoughts,
345
Luxury,
207
Â
Make Up,
282
Master Charge: Blues,
114
Mirrors,
310
Mixed Media,
160
Moon Shines Down, The,
293
Mothers,
144
Mother's Habits,
204
My House,
192
My Poem,
86
My Tower,
174
Â
New Yorkers, The,
235
Night,
220
Nikki-Rosa,
53
No Reservations,
94
Nothing Makes Sense,
183
Â
Of Liberation,
41
Once a Lady Told Me,
199
On Hearing “The Girl with the Flaxen Hair,”
4
Only Song I'm Singing, The,
154
On Seeing Black Journal and Watching Nine Negro Leaders “Give Aid and Comfort to the Enemy” to Quote Richard Nixon,
187
Oppression,
128
Our Detroit Conference,
8
Â
Patience,
281
Personae Poem,
11
Photography,
271
Poem,
208
Poem,
242
Poem (For Anna Hedgeman and Alfreda Duster),
181
Poem (For BMC No. 1),
7
Poem (For BMC No. 2),
10
Poem (For BMC No. 3),
14
Poem (For Dudley Randall),
9
Poem (For EMA),
278
Poem (For Nina),
175
Poem (No Name No. 1),
13
Poem (No Name No. 2),
18
Poem (No Name No. 3),
23
Poem (For PCH),
12
Poem (For TW),
6
Poem/Because It Came As A Surprise To Me, A,
127
Poem For A Lady Whose Voice I Like,
135
Poem for Aretha,
103
Poem for Black Boys,
45
Poem for Carol, A,
146
Poem for Ed and Archie, A,
274
Poem For Flora,
131
Poem for langston hughes, A,
356
Poem for Lloyd,
101
Poem For My Nephew,
133
Poem for Stacia,
152
Poem For Unwed Mothers,
122
Poem of Angela Yvonne Davis,
351
Poem Off Center, A,
245
Poem of Friendship, A,
291
Poem on the Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy, A,
319
Poetry,
221
Poetry is a Tressel,
210
Â
Rain,
100
Records,
60
Reflections/On a Golden Anniversary,
320
Reflections on April 4, 1968,
49
Resignation,
334
Response, A,
290
Revolutionary Dreams,
106
Revolutionary Music,
68
Rituals,
151
Robin's Poem, A,
119
Room With the Tapestry Rug, The,
343
Rose Bush, The,
280
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Scrapbooks,
169
2nd Rapp,
118
Seduction,
35
Short Essay of Affirmation Explaining Why, A,
21
Sky Diving,
332
Something to Be Said for Silence,
213
Sometimes,
132
Some Uses For Them Not Stated,
130
Song for New-Ark, A,
347
Space,
276
Stardate Number 18628.190*,
358
Statement on Conservation, A,
287
Straight Talk,
167
Swaziland,
217
Â
That Day,
294
They Clapped,
179
Their Fathers,
254
This Is Not for John Lennon,
307
Three/Quarters Time,
338
Toy Poem,
129
True Import of Present Dialogue, Black vs. Negro, The,
19
Turning,
288
12 Gates: To The City,
123
Two Poems: From Barbados,
92
Â
Ugly Honkies, or The Election Game and How to Win It,
74
[Unititled],
163
[Unititled] (For Margaret Danner),
173
Universality,
58
Â
Very Simple Wish, A,
218
Â
Walking Down Park,
107
Way I Feel, The,
205
We,
191
When I Die,
171
When I Nap,
159
Wild Flowers,
344
Wilmington Delaware,
24
Winter,
284
Winter Poem,
148
Winter Storm, The,
247
Woman,
275
Woman Poem,
71
Women Gather, The,
197
Wonder Woman, The,
164
Word for Meâ¦Also, A,
341
Word Poem,
36
World Is Not a Pleasant Place to Be, The,
153
Â
Yeahâ¦Butâ¦,
134
You Are There,
285
You Came, Too,
5
You Were Gone,
346