The University of North Carolina Press
Forrest Hamer - Goldsboro narrative #11 - Southern Cultures 6:4 Southern Cultures 6.4 (2000) 131

Mason-Dixon Lines

Goldsboro narrative #11

Forrest Hamer


IMAGE LINK= IMAGE LINK=




I sorely do love her, I thought he said.
Actually, he said he loved her surely,
but Southerners mix words up sometimes
and I have often taken them at face value.

So, as this Southern man was talking about
the Southern woman he would marry,

it seemed to me grownups tangled their feelings
unnecessarily, and especially love. And,
since we were in Goldsboro and it was 1969,
I thought the confusion had to do with race--

with whether integration would work, even
if we called it desegregation (he didn't

believe it would). Or maybe she didn't love him at all
but was afraid to die by herself and
he was as good as the men who wouldn't come along:
surely this could work. That word again.

On the face of it, we know things and we know
even that we don't. We don't seem to do well with

the rest--whatever it is that trips
chaos into talk-and-listen, makes us mix up things.
Or, if race doesn't really explain, then
how do we explain these feelings we have about race?

I was asking the man how he thought our town would do
sending different children to the same schools.

He was in love, he protested, and he just wanted
the South to stay as it was for now,
not get into tangling things



Forrest Hamer was born in North Carolina in 1956 and was educated at Yale and the University of California, Berkeley. He is a psychologist living and working in Oakland, California.

Editor's note: This poem is reprinted by the author's permission from his first book, Call & Response, which won the Beatrice Hawley Award from Alice James Books.

Share