Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American poet Etheridge Knight.
Last updated on December 20, 2024.
Etheridge Knight was an African-American poet who made his name in 1968 with his debut volume, Poems from Prison. The book recalls in verse his eight-year-long sentence after his arrest for robbery in 1960. By the time he left prison, Knight had prepared a second volume featuring his own writings and works of his fellow inmates. This second book, first published in Italy under the title Voce negre dal carcere, appeared in English in 1970 as Black Voices from Prison. These works established Knight as one of the major poets of the Black Arts Movement, which flourished from the early 1960s through the mid-1970s. With roots in the Civil Rights Movement, Malcolm X and the Nation of Islam, and the Black Power Movement, Etheridge Knight and other American artists within the movement sought to create politically engaged work that explored the African-American cultural and historical experience.
I boil my tears in a twisted spoon
And dance like an angel on the point of a needle.
Each Fall the graves of my grandfathers call me, the brown
hills and red gullies of mississippi send out their electric
messages, galvanizing my genes.
To write a blues song
is to regiment riots
and pluck gems from graves.
I died in 1960 from a prison sentence and poetry brought me back to life.
Black Poets should live--not leap
From steel bridges, like the white boys do.
Love is a rock against the wind. Not soft like silk and lace.
Let all Black Poets die as trumpets,
And be buried in the dust of marching feet.
We dreamed of doing but could not bring ourselves to do.