Do You Think

Do You Think


Do you think this is a sad day

    a sad night

full of tequila  full of el dorado

    full of banana solitudes


And my chorizo face a holiday for knives

    and my arching lips  a savannah for cuchifritos

and my spit curls a symbol for you

    to overcharge  overbill  oversell me

these saints  these candles

    these dented cars  loud pipes

no insurance and no place to park

    because my last name is Cortez


Do you think this is a sad night

    a sad day


And on this elevator

    between my rubber shoes

in the creme de menthe of my youth

    the silver tooth of my age

the gullah speech of my one trembling tit

full of tequila  full of el dorado

    full of banana solitudes you tell me

i use more lights  more gas

    more telephones  more sequins  more feathers

more iridescent head-stones

    you think i accept this pentecostal church

in exchange for the lands you stole


And because my name is Cortez

    do you think this is a revision

of flesh studded with rivets

    my wardrobe clean

the pick in my hair

    the pomegranate in my hand

14th street  delancey street  103rd street

    reservation where i lay my skull

the barrio of need

    the police state in ashes

drums full of tequila  full of el dorado

    full of banana solitudes say:

Do you really think time speaks english

    in the mens room

Jayne Cortez was born in Arizona and grew up in the Watts Community of Los Angeles. She is the author of three books of poetry—Pissstained Stairs and the Monkey Man's Wares (1969), Festivals and Funerals (1971), Scarifications (1973), from which this poem is reprinted, and a recording — Celebrations and Solitudes (Strata East Records, 1975).

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