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Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: http://faculty.lagcc.cuny.edu/eiannotti/harlem/ harlem.htm
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Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

Jan 05, 2016

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Page 1: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

Harlem: A Poem

By Walter Dean MyersFound on the Internet:

http://faculty.lagcc.cuny.edu/eiannotti/harlem/harlem.htm

Page 2: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .
Page 3: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

They took the road in Waycross, GeorgiaSkipped over the tracks in East St. Louis

Took the bus from Holly SpringsHitched a ride from Gee’s Bend

Took the long way through MemphisThe third deck down from Trinidad

A wrench of heart from Goree Island A wrench of heart from Goree Island

To a place calledHarlem

Page 4: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

Harlem was a promiseOf a better life,

of a place where a manDidn’t have to know his place

Simply becauseHe was Black

Page 5: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

They brought a callA song

First heard in the villages ofGhana/Mali/Senegal

Calls and songs and shoutsHeavy hearted tambourine rhythms

Loosed in the hard cityLike a scream torn from the throat

Of an ancient clarinet

Page 6: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

A new sound, raucous and sassyCascading over the asphalt village

Breaking against the black sky over1-2-5 Street

Announcing HallelujahRiffing past resolution

Page 7: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

Yellow, tan, brown, black, redGreen, gray, bright

Colors loud enough to be heardLight on asphalt streets

Sun yellow shirts on burnt umberBodies

Demanding to be heardSeen

Sending out warriors

Page 8: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

From streets known to beMourning still as a lone radio tells us how

Jack JohnsonJoe LouisSugar Ray

Is doing with our hopes.

Page 9: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

We hopeWe pray

Our black skinsReflecting the face of God

In storefront temples

Page 10: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

Jive and Jehovah artistsLay out the human canvas

The mood indigo

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A chorus of summer herbsOf mangoes and bar-b-que

Of perfumed sistersHip strutting pastFried fish joints

On Lenox Avenue in steamy August

Page 12: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

A carnival of childrenPeople in the daytime streets

Ring-a-levio warriorsStickball heroes

Hide-and-seek knights and ladiesWaiting to sing their own sweet songsLiving out their own slam-dunk dreams

ListeningFor the coming of the blues

Page 13: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

A weary blues that Langston knewAnd Countee sung

A river of bluesWhere Du Bois wadedAnd Baldwin preached

Page 14: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

There is liltTempo

CadenceA language of darkness

Darkness knownDarkness sharpened at Mintons

Darkness lightened at the Cotton ClubSent flying from Abyssinian Baptist

To the Apollo.

Page 15: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

The uptown ARattles past 110th Street

Unreal to realRelaxing the soul

Page 16: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

Shango and JesusAsante and Mende

One peopleA hundred different people

Huddled massesAnd crowded dreams

Page 17: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

SquaresBlocks, bricks

Fat, round woman in a rectangleSunday night gospel

“Precious Lord…take my hand,Lead me on, let me stand…”

Page 18: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

Caught by a full lippedFull hipped Saint

Washing collard greensIn a cracked porcelain sink

Backing up Lady Day on the radio

Page 19: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

Brother so black and bluePatting a wide foot outside the

Too hot Walk-up“Boy,

You ought to find the guys who told youyou could play some checkers‘cause he done lied to you!”

Page 20: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

Cracked reed and soprano sax laughter

Floats overa fleet of funeral cars

Page 21: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

In HarlemSparrows sit on fire escapes

Outside rent partiesTo learn the tunes.

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In HarlemThe wind doesn’t blow past Smalls

It stops to listen to the sounds

Page 23: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

Serious businessA poem, rhapsody tripping along

Striver’s RowNot getting it’s metric feel soiled

On the well-swept walksHustling through the hard rain at two o’clock

In the morning to its next gig.

Page 24: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

A huddle of hornsAnd a tinkle of glass

A noteHanded down from Marcus to Malcolm

To a brotherToo bad and too cool to give his name.

Page 25: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

Sometimes despairMakes the stoops shudder

Sometimes there are endless depths of painSinging a capella on street corners

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And sometimes not.

Page 27: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

Sometimes it is the artistlooking into the mirror

Painting a portrait of his own heart.

Page 28: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

PlaceSound

CelebrationMemories of feelings

Of place

Page 29: Harlem: A Poem By Walter Dean Myers Found on the Internet: .

A journey on the A trainThat started on the banks of the Niger

And has not ended

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Harlem.