PATRICIA SMITH
Asking for a Heart Attack
For Aretha Franklin

Aretha. Deep buter dipt, burnt pot liquor, twisted sugar cane,
Vaselined
knock knees clacking extraordinary gospel.
hustling toward the promised land
in 4/4 time, Aretha.
Greased and glowing awash in limelight, satisfied
moan
'neath the spotlight, turning ample ass toward midnight,
she the
it's-all-good goddess of warm cornbread
and bumped buttermilk, know jesus by
his first name.
carried his gospel low and democratic in rollicking
brownships,
sang His drooping corpse down from that ragged wooden
T,
dressed Him up in something shiny, conked that Holy head of hair,
then
Aretha rustled up bus fare and took the deity downtown.
They coaxed the DJ
and slid electric untill the lights slammed on,
she taught Him dirty
nicknames for His father's handiwork.
She was young then, thin and aching,
her heartbox shut tight.
So Jesus blessed her, He opened her throat and
taught her
to wail that way she do, she do wail that way don't she
do that
wail the way she do wail that way, don't she?
Now every time 'retha unreel
that screech, sang Delta
cut through hurting to glimpse been-done-wrong
bone,
a born-again brother called the Holy Ghost creeps through that.
and
that, for all you still lookin', is religion.
Dare you question her several shoulders, the soft stairsteps
of flesh
leading to her shaking chins, the steel bones
of a corseted frock eating into
bubbling sides,
zipper track etched into skin,
all those faint
scars,
those lovesore battle wounds?
Ain't your mama never told you
how
black women collect the world,
build other bodies onto their own?
No
earthly man knows the solution to our hips,
asses urgent as
sirens,
titties familiar as everybody's mama
crisscrossed with pulled
roads of blood.
Ask us why we pray with our dancin' shoes on, why we
grow
fat away from everyone and toward each other.
step back beyond what is seen