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Maya Angelou

Work, Humor, and Witness

Work, appetite, humor, poverty, sleeplessness, testimony, and Angelou's social eye.
Woman WorkI've got the children to tend / The clothes to mend / The floor to mop / The food to shop / Then the
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The Health-Food DinerNo sprouted wheat and soya shoots / And Brussels in a cake, / Carrot straw and spinach raw, / (Today
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Momma Welfare RollHer arms semaphore fat triangles, / Pudgy HANDS bunched on layered hips / Where bones idle under yea
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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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InsomniacThere are some nights when / sleep plays coy, / aloof and disdainful. / And all the wiles / that I e
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The LessonI keep on dying again. / Veins collapse, opening like the / Small fists of sleeping / Children. / Me
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Preacher, Don't Send MePreacher, don't send me / when I die / to some big ghetto / in the sky / where rats eat cats / of th
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End of Work, Humor, and Witness

Preacher, Don't Send Me

Keep readingMaya Angelou: Work, Humor, and Witness

by Maya Angelou

Preacher, don't send me when I die to some big ghetto in the sky where rats eat cats of the leopard type and Sunday brunch is grits and tripe. I've known those rats I've seen them kill and grits I've had would make a hill, or maybe a mountain, so what I need from you on Sunday is a different creed. Preacher, please don't promise me streets of gold and milk for free. I stopped all milk at four years old and once I'm dead I won't need gold. I'd call a place pure paradise where families are loyal and strangers are nice, where the music is jazz and the season is fall. Promise me that or nothing at all.
Written by
Maya Angelou
1928-2014 / Female / American
For You?
Written by
Maya Angelou
1928-2014 / Female / American
Time
2m
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