We Just Waiting for J's Liquor to Open on Up, and: It's Pinned Above My Desk—That Picture, and: Just Another Day in Fourth Grade

IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 LITERARY REVIEWS SEWANEE REVIEW Pub Date : 2024-05-06 DOI:10.1353/sew.2024.a926960
Patricia Smith
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I admit</span><span>out loud to being Jesus’ damned near, the almost</span><span>of the Holy Ghost, the mistake that won’t quit even if</span><span>it could see how. I’m out here in the wind with the rest</span><span>of the no-shame-in-our-game disciples, heads bowed,</span><span>eyes leaking the last of last night. We are obedient</span><span>in the way the just-waking boulevard says we must be—</span><span>reverent, slow-stomping our dirt-tired hymns. Looks like</span><span>we’re waiting for another sloppy resurrection. But not</span><span>me, Lawd, not this fool. I’m next in line for the cross.</span></p> <h2><em>2</em>.</h2> <p><span>Checking my phone, and here come that text message over</span><span>and over: <em>Where you at?</em> Last time I looked, I’m still grown,</span><span>still walking any street that’ll hold on to me. I’m still grown,</span><span>rising from my own damned bed just in time, scrubbing</span><span>the sweat from my ass, getting to where I need to be, right <strong>[End Page 248]</strong></span> <span>on the clock. <em>I’m where I’m gon’ be at,</em> I say with my thumbs,</span><span>then I shut the damn thing off ’cause I can’t stand the way</span><span>those green numbers keep yelling <em>Not yet</em>. I need these folks</span><span>to roll that cranky old steel on up, let me run straight to my</span><span>sip of beautiful, my sip of slow drag, my sip of the way</span><span>I need my man to rock me. Until then, I’ll disappear inside</span><span>my own thirsty shadow, trying not to lock pinkish eye with</span><span>the only other sister here. Why they keep locking up our</span><span>beautiful, locking down the only way we know to sing?</span></p> <h2><em>3.</em></h2> <p><span>Nobody sings the blues anymore. Nobody’s got the gut,</span><span>walks the gravel, nobody takes the time to really know</span><span>what’s under the under that’s under us. I’ve been there.</span><span>What I saw peeled me bloodless, made me stumble, it</span><span>caused me to renounce my Christian name. I saw my</span><span>mama, her legs blown up near to bursting, the boom</span><span>in her veins bulging her eyes. Then I saw my daddy,</span><span>who said again that, for the life of him, he didn’t know</span><span>who the hell I was. Then that hardest picture hit me,</span><span>my baby boy, way too little, blue, tangled up in his own</span><span>lifeline. I keep feeling his last breath like a rock thrown</span><span>against my neck. And the women, the ones I’ve straight</span><span>up lied to, the ones that crawled my skin. And the last</span><span>hell I see, every damned time, is me. Here. Waiting.</span></p> <h2><em>4.</em></h2> <p><span>I just like it. I like how my day winds loose once it’s</span><span>in me, how I start lovin’ folks I should hate, how <strong>[End Page 249]</strong></span> <span>the sun just keeps rising, over and over, and how my</span><span>name sounds like butter on the air. Nothing else</span><span>remakes me this kinda way. I can’t sleep or wake</span><span>up without it, that burn torching my landscape clean,</span><span>it’s the smasher of sorrows, a quarter for my jukebox,</span><span>it’s what Jesus sends me when He can’t get here</span><span>on time. I just need it. I’m not like these other folks,</span><span>all broke and shake. Don’t need to slap everything</span><span>black, I’m not asking for the liquor to shut me down.</span><span>I’m out here under this sun waiting for the sun to rise,</span><span>I’m here to carve this life to my liking. Stay here and</span><span>watch me. 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Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • We Just Waiting for J’s Liquor to Open on Up, and: It’s Pinned Above My Desk—That Picture, and: Just Another Day in Fourth Grade
  • Patricia Smith (bio)

We Just Waiting for J’s Liquor to Open on Up

1.

I smell the cloying stink of a particular religion etchingits gospel on the scrubbed, unworried side of the rollingshutters. It’s the funk of the preach that draws me here,the side-eye that renders me bent double, twinging, mythick mouth willing to swap language for flame. I admitout loud to being Jesus’ damned near, the almostof the Holy Ghost, the mistake that won’t quit even ifit could see how. I’m out here in the wind with the restof the no-shame-in-our-game disciples, heads bowed,eyes leaking the last of last night. We are obedientin the way the just-waking boulevard says we must be—reverent, slow-stomping our dirt-tired hymns. Looks likewe’re waiting for another sloppy resurrection. But notme, Lawd, not this fool. I’m next in line for the cross.

2.

Checking my phone, and here come that text message overand over: Where you at? Last time I looked, I’m still grown,still walking any street that’ll hold on to me. I’m still grown,rising from my own damned bed just in time, scrubbingthe sweat from my ass, getting to where I need to be, right [End Page 248] on the clock. I’m where I’m gon’ be at, I say with my thumbs,then I shut the damn thing off ’cause I can’t stand the waythose green numbers keep yelling Not yet. I need these folksto roll that cranky old steel on up, let me run straight to mysip of beautiful, my sip of slow drag, my sip of the wayI need my man to rock me. Until then, I’ll disappear insidemy own thirsty shadow, trying not to lock pinkish eye withthe only other sister here. Why they keep locking up ourbeautiful, locking down the only way we know to sing?

3.

Nobody sings the blues anymore. Nobody’s got the gut,walks the gravel, nobody takes the time to really knowwhat’s under the under that’s under us. I’ve been there.What I saw peeled me bloodless, made me stumble, itcaused me to renounce my Christian name. I saw mymama, her legs blown up near to bursting, the boomin her veins bulging her eyes. Then I saw my daddy,who said again that, for the life of him, he didn’t knowwho the hell I was. Then that hardest picture hit me,my baby boy, way too little, blue, tangled up in his ownlifeline. I keep feeling his last breath like a rock thrownagainst my neck. And the women, the ones I’ve straightup lied to, the ones that crawled my skin. And the lasthell I see, every damned time, is me. Here. Waiting.

4.

I just like it. I like how my day winds loose once it’sin me, how I start lovin’ folks I should hate, how [End Page 249] the sun just keeps rising, over and over, and how myname sounds like butter on the air. Nothing elseremakes me this kinda way. I can’t sleep or wakeup without it, that burn torching my landscape clean,it’s the smasher of sorrows, a quarter for my jukebox,it’s what Jesus sends me when He can’t get hereon time. I just need it. I’m not like these other folks,all broke and shake. Don’t need to slap everythingblack, I’m not asking for the liquor to shut me down.I’m out here under this sun waiting for the sun to rise,I’m here to carve this life to my liking. Stay here andwatch me. The harder the drink, the wider I bloom.

5.

There is a mouth in my body, an open sore yawningand awake...

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我们只是在等待 J's Liquor 开门营业,而且:夹在我书桌上的那张照片,以及四年级的又一天
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 我们只是在等待 J's Liquor 开门营业,还有:它被钉在我的书桌上--那幅画,以及只是四年级的又一天 帕特里夏-史密斯(简历) 《我们只是在等待 J's Liquor 开业》 1.我闻到了一种特殊宗教的腻人的臭味,它将福音镌刻在被擦洗过的、没有忧虑的卷帘门上。吸引我来到这里的,是宣讲的乏味,是让我双腿弯曲、扭动的侧目,是愿意用语言换取火焰的神话般的嘴巴。我大声承认自己是耶稣的近邻,是圣灵的近邻,是即使知道如何也不会放弃的错误。我和其他 "不求回报 "的门徒们一起在风中低头,眼睛里流淌着昨晚最后的泪水。我们顺从地走在刚刚醒来的林荫道上,缄默不语,缓缓地跺着脚,唱着我们泥泞的赞美诗。看来我们在等待另一次邋遢的复活。但不是我,劳德,不是这个傻瓜。我是下一个被钉上十字架的人。2.检查我的手机,一遍又一遍的短信来了:你在哪儿?上次我看的时候,我还在长大,还在走在任何一条可以留住我的街道上。我还在成长,及时从自己该死的床上爬起来,擦干屁股上的汗水,按时到达我该去的地方。我翘着大拇指说:"我就在这里。"然后我关掉那该死的东西,因为我受不了那些绿色的数字一直喊着 "还不行"。我需要这些人把那辆老爷车开起来,让我直接奔向我的美酒,我的小酌慢饮,我的小酌方式,我需要我的男人来摇滚我。在那之前,我会消失在自己饥渴的阴影里,尽量不与这里唯一的姐妹对视。为什么他们总是锁住我们的美丽,锁住我们唯一知道的歌唱方式?3.没有人再唱蓝调了。没有人有胆量,没有人走在砾石上,没有人花时间去真正了解在我们下面的是什么。我也曾经历过,我看到的一切让我鲜血淋漓,让我跌跌撞撞,让我放弃了我的基督之名。我看到了我的妈妈,她的双腿被炸得几乎要爆开,青筋暴起,眼冒金星。然后我看到了我的爸爸,他又说,他这辈子都不知道我到底是谁。然后,我看到了那张最难看的照片,我的宝贝儿子,太小了,脸色发青,被自己的生命线缠住了。我一直感觉到他的最后一口气就像一块石头砸在我的脖子上。还有那些女人,那些被我直接欺骗的女人,那些让我痛不欲生的女人。每次我最后看到的都是我自己在这里等待4.我就是喜欢这样我喜欢我的一天在我身上松弛下来的样子,喜欢我开始爱上那些我应该讨厌的人的样子,喜欢[第 249 页完]太阳不断升起的样子,一次又一次,喜欢我的名字在空气中听起来像黄油的声音。没有什么能让我这样。没有它,我无法入睡或醒来,那灼热的火焰将我的风景烧得干干净净,它是悲伤的粉碎机,是我点唱机里的硬币,是耶稣不能准时到达时寄给我的东西。我就是需要它。我不像其他人那样,一贫如洗,摇摇欲坠。我不需要把所有东西都拍黑,我也不需要酒来封杀我。我在这太阳底下等待太阳升起,我在这里按照自己的喜好雕刻生活。待在这里,看着我。酒越烈,我开得越大。5.我的身体里有一张嘴,张开的疮口打着哈欠,醒着......
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来源期刊
SEWANEE REVIEW
SEWANEE REVIEW LITERARY REVIEWS-
CiteScore
0.10
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发文量
44
期刊介绍: Having never missed an issue in 115 years, the Sewanee Review is the oldest continuously published literary quarterly in the country. Begun in 1892 at the University of the South, it has stood as guardian and steward for the enduring voices of American, British, and Irish literature. Published quarterly, the Review is unique in the field of letters for its rich tradition of literary excellence in general nonfiction, poetry, and fiction, and for its dedication to unvarnished no-nonsense literary criticism. Each volume is a mix of short reviews, omnibus reviews, memoirs, essays in reminiscence and criticism, poetry, and fiction.
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