15.2.10


























Blues
by Elizabeth Alexander

I am lazy, the laziest girl in the world. 
I sleep during the day when I want to, 
'til my face is creased and swollen,
'til my lips are dry and hot. I  eat as
 I please: cookies and milk after lunch, 
butter and sour cream on my baked potato, 
foods that slothful people eat, that turn
 yellow and opaque beneath the skin. Sometimes 
come dinnertime Sunday I am still in
 my nightgown, the one with the lace 
trim listing because I have not mended it. 
Many days I do not exercise, only consider it, 
then rub my curdy belly and lie down. 
Even my poems are lazy. I use syllabics instead of 
iambs, prefer slant to the gong of full rhyme, 
write briefly while others go for pages. And yesterday, 
for example,I did not work at all! I got in my car and I drove  
to factory outlet stores,purchased stockings and panties 
and socks with my father's money.  
To think, in childhood I missed only one day 
of school per year. I went to ballet class four days a 
week at four-forty-five and on Saturdays, beginning always with 
plie, ending with curtsy. To think, I knew only industry, the 
industry of my race and of immigrants, the radio tuned always 
to the station that said, Line up your summer job months in advance. 
Work hard and do not shame your family, who worked hard to give you what 
you have. There is no sin but sloth. Burn to a wick and keep 
moving. I avoided sleep for years, up at night replaying  
evening news stories about nearby jailbreaks, fat people who ate 
fried chicken and woke up dead. In sleep I am looking for 
poems in the shape of open V's of birds flying in formation, or open
arms saying, I forgive you, all.