"Listen, you
who transformed your anguish
into healthy awareness,
put your voice
where your memory is.
You who swallowed
the afternoon dust,
defend everything you understand
with words.
You, if no one else,
will condemn with your tongue
the erosion each disappointment brings.
You, who saw the images
of disgust growing,
will understand how time
devours the destitute;
you, who gave yourself
your own commandments,
know better than anyone
why you turned your back
on your town's toughest limits.
Don't hush,
don't throw away
the most persistent truth,
as our hard-headed brethren
sometimes do.
Remember well
what your life was like: cloudiness,
and slick mud
after a drizzle;
flimsy windows the wind
kept rattling
in winter, and that
unheated slab dwelling
where coldness crawled
up in your clothes.
Tell how you were able to come
to this point, to unbar
History's doors
to see your early years,
your people, the others.
Name the way
rebellion's calm spirit has served you,
and how you came
to unlearn the lessons
of that teacher,
your land's omnipotent defiler."
You, If No One Else (Tino Villaneuva)
Luchette, Claire. "You, If No One Else."Poetry Foundation. Poetry Foundation. Web. 10 Sept. 2014. http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/247064.
This poem, though relatively universal in theme, is obviously the result of a specific experience that the author went through. He went through a terrible season of tragedy, but somehow survived, and is reminding the audience (and himself) of the strength found in those difficult situations. Lessons have been learned and he has gotten stronger because of what he went through, which is conveyed through the poem through such lines as "You, who transformed your anguish into healthy awareness" and "why you turned your back on your town's toughest limits." He challenges the reader (again, and himself) to dig deep within themselves to find that same strength and perseverance, and apply it to current situations. It seems rather ironic that one would be so strong in times of adversity yet "throw away the most persistent truth" of what they learned from the experience. I chose this poem because I identified with the sentiment that the author described; he also issued a challenge to the audience that I found to be interesting and new.
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