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Maya Angelou

Love, Memory, and Kinship

Love, touch, remembrance, aging, family feeling, passing time, and intimate address.
Touched by An AngelWe, unaccustomed to courage / exiles from delight / live coiled in shells of loneliness / until love
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RefusalBeloved, / In what other lives or lands / Have I known your lips / Your Hands / Your Laughter brave
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RemembranceYour hands easy / weight, teasing the bees / hived in my hair, your smile at the / slope of my cheek
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Passing TimeYour skin like dawn / Mine like musk / One paints the beginning / of a certain end. / The other, the
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When You ComeWhen you come to me, unbidden, / Beckoning me / To long-ago rooms, / Where memories lie. / Offering
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MenWhen I was young, I used to / Watch behind the curtains / As men walked up and down the street. Wino
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Old Folks laughThey have spent their / content of simpering, / holding their lips this / and that way, winding / th
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AloneLying, thinking / Last night / How to find my soul a home / Where water is not thirsty / And bread l
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End of Love, Memory, and Kinship

Old Folks laugh

Keep readingMaya Angelou: Love, Memory, and Kinship

by Maya Angelou

They have spent their content of simpering, holding their lips this and that way, winding the lines between their brows. Old folks allow their bellies to jiggle like slow tamborines. The hollers rise up and spill over any way they want. When old folks laugh, they free the world. They turn slowly, slyly knowing the best and the worst of remembering. Saliva glistens in the corners of their mouths, their heads wobble on brittle necks, but their laps are filled with memories. When old folks laugh, they consider the promise of dear painless death, and generously forgive life for happening to them.
Written by
Maya Angelou
1928-2014 / Female / American
For You?
Written by
Maya Angelou
1928-2014 / Female / American
Time
2m
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