Didnt know I was colored?

by Ronald Edwards   Oct 11, 2010


Down on Grandmas Farm: Part 12

Most the time while playing,
notice, of children seemingly
tanning quicker and browner
than me
never made me think they to be
smarter, dumber, richer or poorer.

Up north while in school
hallways and classrooms
had all kinds of skins sitting next to me.
Just another girl whos hair I could pull.
Just another boy to play kick ball at recess.

But down here in Virginia
I found that certain people
mind you, that always look the same,
are colored.

Now I am still a snot nose
knee high to a mule child
with mush for brains,
so as my brothers tell me,
eight year old whose head is in the clouds
thinking of chasing blue jays around the yard.

Realizing that there is a color that is colored
well that made as much sense to me
as making my bed right before going to sleep.

There was this time
Grandma and me were in town.
Keysville is the name,
yawn while driving and youd miss it.

Main Street had shops with big windows,
bold, black letters in half circles spelling out
General Store or Dry Goods
never did understand that
everything was better in milk making it wet,
didnt want to go in there.
Some stores had
womens dresses, blue and yellow
hanging on fake women dolls,
wearing broad straw hats,
some fancied up with lace.

There was a pair of sidewalks,
split by asphalt street,
traffic lights at each end of town
police office where we came in
post office on the way out.

To the best of my recollection
a man in overhauls
red from the bald spot on his head
to his neck around his open dirty collard shirt,
said hello to Grandma and me

Then two women, white as milk
passed us by only to stop
admiring them dresses and hats.

From a side street stumbled a hunched over
grayish awfully smelling man.
Grandma squeezed tightly
like my hands were oranges,
and she was making juice,
her pace quickened.

Her walk slowed down
two stores later,
back to usual double time for me.
Then a man turned up ahead
onto our sidewalk.
At first glance it looked like
Henry Gee, but no , just another man.

As we approached
he stopped dead in his tracks,
turned and stepped off the
sidewalk into the street,
allowing us to pass
as if Grandma was the Queen of England.

We stopped at the post office at the end of town
Grandma why did that man
walk into the street to let us pass?
Thats what colored folk do child

I spent the better part of the week
with Henry Gee out back in the fields.
All I could think was
I get blue when Im cold
red when I get a fever,
brown when I stay in the sun
really white in the winter
and oh yeah my butt turns purple
when I get a woopin,
But Henry Gee is colored.
I guess Grandma wasnt thinking proper.
I guess she meant to say,
Thats what men do
when colored folk walk by.

Copyright 2008 Ronald J. Edwards

0


Did You Like This Poem?

Latest Comments

  • 13 years ago

    by Sylvia

    Ron, memories, memories come flooding back when I read these. Some things change and some don't in life. Thank goodness some of this has changed in today's world.