BABY OF THE MISTAKEN HUE

Baby of the mistaken hue, child of the wrong nose

with its measure unleashed, baby of the nappy knot,

I am your mother. Mad at your whole damned face,

I swear to the task of torching the regrettable Delta

from your disobeying braids. I pinch your breathing

shut to reteach the bone, smear guaranteed cream

on your pimpled forehead, chin, and cheeks. I am

the corrector. Soaking a kitchen towel with the blaze

of holy water, I consider just what you are naked,

recoil at the insistent patches of midnight blanketing

your skin and I scrub, scrub, push the hard heel

of my hand deep into the dark, coax cleansing

threads of blood to the stinging surface, nod gently

in the direction of your Mama, don’t! I command

you to bend, to turn, to twist in the wobbly dinette

chair and reveal what hides from me, those places

on you that still insist on saying Negro out loud.

Remember how the nonbelievers screeched their

nonbelief at Jesus even as he laid his giving hands

upon them? One day you will comprehend the torch

I am. You will be burned smaller, lighter, ever closer

to the whiteness of my God, who loves you as you are.