In
Honor Of Women’s History Month – Poet Jesse Baxter’s In Pharaoh Times
In Pharaoh Times
Isis, daughter of Isis major, mother- wife-sister of the
human sun god
Awoke, awoke with a start weary from brother couplings; and
stray poppy laden abandoned copulations
Configurations only a deacon priest filled with signs and
amulets could fathom, or some racked court astrologer
To face the stone-breaking day, a day filled to the brim,
overflowing, with portents
Arisen, washed, fragranced, headed to the balcony to observe
unseen and to be observed seen beneath the cloudless skies
Out in the ocean sea of whirling sand, out in the endless chiseled
stone sun blazing day; her sea visage on down heads, eyes averted
Hittites, Gilts, Samians, Cretans, Nubians, Babylonians all
conquered all down heads and averted eyes
Out on the ocean see, a lone sable warrior defeated, defeated
with down head and upward eye disturbed the blistering heat day
Isis, daughter of Isis major, mother-wife-sister-child of
the human sun king shrinks back in fear, fear time has come
That black will devour Nubian and rise, rise
Yes, rise in Pharaoh times
Jesse Baxter had never been so angry in his black young life
as he had been at his, well, let’s call her his lady friend, Louise Crawford,
since he was not sure whether girlfriend in the intricate relationship networks
of the1960s in quirky old Greenwich Village in the depths of trail-blazing New
Jack City was an appropriate designation for their newly flowered relationship.
Jesse a budding poet, a very hopeful poet who had just begun to get noticed in
that rarified Village air had become one of Louise Crawford ‘s, ah, “conquests”
on her way to tasting all that the
Bohemian night offered (not quite “beat,”
that had become passé by then and not quite “hip” as in hippie that
would become the fashion later in the decade so bohemian, meaning out on the
cultural outer edge, would do, would do as long as Jesse thought such a term
was appropriate).
Jesse had seen Louise around the Village several times at
the trendy art shows, upbeat coffeehouses beginning to emerge from “beat”
poetry and jazz scenes to retro folk revival stuff, and at a few loft parties
large enough to get lost in without having met everybody or anyone, if that was
what one wanted. He had heard of her “exploits,” exploits tramping through the
budding literati but had only become acquainted with Louise through her “old”
lover, Jose, Jose Guzman, the surrealist-influenced painter who was beginning
to make a splash for himself in the up and coming art galleries emerging over
in nearby Soho. And either she had tired of him (possible) or he had tired of
her (more probable since Jose was thrown off right from the beginning by her
“bourgeois “command manner and her overweening need to seem like a white
hipster under every circumstance although she was quote, Jose, quote, square,
unquote but a good tumble, a very good tumble under the sheets) and so one night
she had hit on Jesse at a coffeehouse where he was reading and that was that.
But enough of small talk and back to Jesse’s rage. At one
up-scale party held on Riverside Drive among the culturati, or what passed for
such in downtrodden New York, as they
had become an “item” Louise had introduced Jesse as the “greatest Negro poet
since Langston Hughes and the Harlem Renaissance.” Jesse was not put off by the
comparison with the great Hughes, no way, he accepted that designation with a
certain sense of honor, although qualified a bit by the different rhythm that
motivated Langston’s words, be-bop jazz, and his own Bo Diddley /Chuck
Berry-etched “child of rock and roll”
beat running in his head. What he was put off by was that “negro” designation, a term of derision just then in
his universe as young blacks, especially young black men, were moving away from
the negro Doctor King thing and toward that Malcolm freedom term, black, black
as night, black is beautiful. Jesus, hadn’t she read his To Malcolm –Black Warrior Prince. (Apparently one of the virtues of
tramping through the literati was an understanding that there was no actual
need to read, look, hear, anything that your new “conquest” had written, drawn
or sung. In the case of Louise she had made something of an art form out of
that fact once confessing to Jesse that she had only actually read, and re-read,
his Louise Love In Quiet Time written
by him after some silly spat since she was the subject. His other work she had
somebody summarize for her. Jesus, again.)
And it was not like Louise Crawford, yes, that Crawford, the
scion-ess [sic] of the Wall Street Crawfords who had (have) been piling up
dough and gouging profits since the start of the republic, was not attuned to
the changes going on underneath bourgeois society just then but was her way to
“own” him, own him like in olden times. While he was too much the gentile son of
W.E.B. Dubois’ “talented tenth” (his parents both school teachers down in
hometown Trenton who however needed to scrimp and safe to put him through
Howard University) to make a scene at that party latter in the cab home to her
place in the Village (as the well-tipped taxi driver could testify to, if
necessary) Jesse lashed into her with all the fury a budding poet and belittled
black man could muster. In short, he would not be “owned” by some white bread
woman who was just “cruising” the cultural and ethnic out-riggings before going
back to marry some son of some sorry family friend stockbroker and live on
Riverside Drive and summer in the Hamptons and all the rest while he struggled
to create his words, his black soul-saturated word .
The harangue continued up into her loft and then Jesse ran
out of steam a little (he had had a little too much of high-shelf liquors and of
hits on the bong pipe to last forever in that state). Louise called for a
truce, said she was sorry, sorry for being a square, and called him to her bed,
pretty please to her bed. He, between the buzz in his head from the stimulants and
the realization that she was good in bed, if nothing else, followed. And that
night they made those sheets sweat with their juices. After they were depleted
Jesse thought to himself that Louise might be just slumming but he would take a
ticket and stay for the ride and fell asleep. Louise on the other hand, got up
and went to the window to look out at her city, lit a cigarette and pondered
some of Jesse’s words, pondered them for a while and got just a little bit
fearful for her future as she went back to her bed and lay down next to the
sleeping Jesse.
Later when he
awakened just before dawn Jesse wrote his edgy poem In Pharaoh Times partially to contain the edges of his left-over
rage and partially to take his distance from a daughter of Isis…
And hence this Women’s History Month contribution.
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