Audre Lorde: Take My Word for Jewel
Audre Lorde, who was born in 1934 in New York City to Caribbean parents, became one of the foremost Black feminist writers and activists of the twentieth century. In the thirty years since her passing, her workāranging from prose to poetry, autobiography to fiction, political to eroticāhas only grown in resonance. On May 15th, 1970, aged 36, Lorde read a collection of her poems at the storied Fassett Studio, where they were recorded and archived for Harvardās Woodberry Poetry Room. Many of the poems she chose to read speak of hunger and burning: the Lorde of these recordings was a poet and a woman at a crossroads, on her way to becoming the āBlack lesbian feminist warrior poet motherā we know, learning how to negotiate, with language, a world where the stakes were always high.
Today, an LP of Lordeās recording is out from Fonograf Editions. Weāre pleased to present an audio excerpt from the record here, along with an essay by Carl Phillips, the acclaimed poet and one of Lordeās most learned admirers, that he contributed to its liner notes.
āThe Editors
Until listening to this recording, Iād never heard Audre Lordeās speaking voice. I donāt think I had any particular preconceptions of how sheād sound. I just hoped she wouldnāt disappoint me the way so many of my poetry idols have, once Iāve heard them read; itās amazing how many poets seem unable to read their own work well, by which I mean with a confidence that doesnāt shun humility, and with a persuasiveness that avoids sounding pedantic.
Confident and persuasive from the start, Lorde doesnāt disappoint. What I was most immediately struck by, though, was the exactness of phrasing Lorde gives to each word, something that goes beyond mere enunciationāthis reading is like a master class in elocution. And as it turns out, this isnāt just a style that Lorde adopts when reading her poems; she sounds the same when speaking casually in between the poems. I donāt want to make too much of what quite likely was just how Lorde grew up speaking, instinctively. But in the context of this reading, and of Lordeās body of work, I hear a very deliberate insistence on precisionāprecision as the main weapon with which to negotiate a world where the stakesāpolitically, bodily, in love and in warāare always decisively high. Michael Palmer has spoken of words as a sacrament to be handled accordingly with great care. For Lorde, itās as if great care were necessary, yes, but more because, for her, language is not so much sacred as explosive: I am making something dangerous here, Lorde seems to say, I could do great damage with what I make; I could destroy myself, if careless, in the course of making.
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How to get at whatās essential, at the essenceāof ourselves, of those whom we love, of a society that seems reluctant, at best, to include all of us? āI am trying to tell this without art or embellishment,ā Lorde says in āBlood Birth.ā The poems display great artistry, of course. But itās also the case that, as with how she reads, what for Lorde defines artistry is a spareness, an exactness, an avoidance of overcrowding a poem with images; Lorde knows the single right image is much more powerful than several less carefully chosen ones. She also understands the potential (the tendency?) of images, when brought together, to work in unison as camouflageāform that can distract from the substance behind it. Itās an odd conundrum. The work of a poet is to gather words and imagery together to convey a particular meaning or set of meanings. But the imperative that goes with that is to recognize how words, like imagery, can deceive us when brought together. And Lorde suggests, even in how sheās arranged her set of poems for this recording, that this deception has the potential to occur in contexts that straddle public and private. It seems very purposeful how, right after a sequence of overtly āpoliticalā poems ā āThe American Cancer Societyā¦,ā āSewerplant Grows in Harlemā¦,ā and āA Ballad of Black ChildhoodāāLorde casually announces that the next three poems āare love poems.ā The love poems which are then followed by āConversations in Crisis,ā where she could as easily be addressing a lover or a corporation when she distinguishes her addresseeās words from āthe false heat in the voice,ā a distinction that alerts her to the power of words to deceive: this is what marketing knows, this is what those whom we trust most intimately also knowāwhat we ourselves know. Who of us hasnāt betrayed someone, even if incidentally, even if itās ourselves we betrayed?
āTake my word for jewelāāthatās how Lorde, aloud and on the page, delivers each word, with a consciousness of any wordās value, and of its powers both to destroy and to illuminate. āSome words/Bedevil me.ā Love is a word, too:
Love is a word another kind of openā
As a diamond comes into a knot of flame
I am black because I come from the earthās inside
Take my word for jewel in your open light.
For me, these lines say everything about Lordeās gift to American letters, namely, her commitment to the poetās responsibility to look honestly, truthfully, at the worlds around and within us, to find the essence of human interiorityāāthe total black, being spoken/From the earthās insideāāand to understand it through the clarity of open light, āanother kind of open.ā We have everything to loseāand, being mortal, we inevitably eventually lose it. All the more reason to take the full measure and value of what we haveāthis lifeāand to honor it by giving voice to each flashing aspect of it, word by word, jewel by jewel. Precision in this context becomes more than strategy. Itās an act of rescueāa choice. Itās an act of love.
āCarl Phillips, August 2022, Saint Louis MO ā¦
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