To My Neighbor Who Had the All Lives Matter Sign on Her Lawn

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To My Neighbor Who Had the All Lives Matter Sign on Her Lawn

 

When the cop spilled bullet brown milk, the authorities

told the country not to cry over spilled milk.

 

The All Lives Matter sign danced across your lawn

with bare feet, a beer in one hand, toothpick

 

between pink lips, and shimmied with the neighbors

in your backyard while your daughter climbed

 

the aluminum siding of the house next door

where the black boy, she loved, smiled

 

from his window, holding the other end of a sheet

she had wrapped around her waist. Woman,

 

you were only one generation from brown.

 

A decade or two later you understood

when you saw a cop through the peep hole

 

of your suburban door. Your hand shook

as you turned the brass knob, and he told you

 

your very own grandson, one generation brown,

who you thought was safe cause he could pass

 

as an infant, had been shot. Something happened

during puberty that you did not expect, brown skin

 

and coils because he refused to cut his hair,

and like Kaepernick took a bow toward Africa.

 

But it was too late for you to go in reverse. Too late

to proclaim, Black Lives Matter when that guilty cop,

 

who pulled the trigger, dined at home with his family

while you cried at the grave of a brown child

 

you never imagined you could love.

 

Shawn R. Jones

Typehouse Literary Magazine (2020)

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