A poem from Elizabeth Alexander, the chair of African-American studies at Yale. Today is the anniversary of the Apollo moon walk (1969).
We pull off
to a road shack
in Massachusetts
to watch men walk
on the moon. We did
the same thing
for three two one
blast off, and nowwe watch the same men
bounce in and out
of craters. I want
a Coke and a hamburger.Because the men
are walking on the moon
which is now irrefutably
not green, not cheese,not a shiny dime floating
in a cold blue,
the way I’d thought,
the road shack people don’tnotice we are a black
family not from there,
the way it mostly goes.
This talking throughstatic, bounces in space-
boots, tethered
to cords is much
stranger, strangereven than we are.