The poet extracted italicized dates and laws from The New-York Historical Society's Slavery In New York: Classroom Materials (Waters, 2005), available online.
Manhattan, 1713: No slaves over the age of 14 could be out at night without a lantern by which they could be plainly seen.
How does one exist     always
in violent illumination     The light flooding:
bright maw
Night is blacker and shifting 
uncontrolled     What must the Black body look like
glowing at dusk     always
foreign     haloed 
                                        warning 
    others of  its coming
 
								Oversight
                  Light
                           to your shimmering black
Lantern to chin, Chattel
     Your glint and focused
quiet
Your poor person’s pride     Well-lit 
                                                       niggerness 
floating:
               a firefly’s wonder
                   Your haunt     
humble An unsaved     shadow
big as a new moon
 
								Brooklyn, 2014: Omnipresence
Floodlights loom over 
the projects
                              humming
on watch like sentinels
In this open-ended morning     the Black 
body always moves 
     toward heaven bound
     No ones mistakes its slipping between 
drawn curtains as safety
The constant whirring of generators:
locust     death rattle
      surveillance                                                               Hear them always
               buzzing  
into bone          Officers lean
into their confidence  
               Each evening
the lights: surrogates     observing 
and pushing through  
          privacy     Shining on all 
inches of suspicion 
 
								Amplification
You and your broad nose
are of interest     In the furious shine
you cast shadows 
                                   At all times of day 
you fit     several
descriptions
What is light but an accomplice?
 
								Manhattan, 1722: Black funerals had to be held during daylight.
Look:
               the body adapts
                             Is even 
buried in the sun’s 
     brightest moments
What can be done
to a body that sleeps
              and prays in the perpetual day
     beams seeping into its casket?
|look|
What can be done 
with a body watched from all angles for signs
               of danger 
               and magic
Without the death’s sunset 
the body is eternal as the humming
sun
|Yes and brighter still|
 
								Manhattan, 1742: Every household was required to keep watch for suspicious night-time behavior of slaves.
Even evening     the body 
is studied
     its shadows watched naturally as if changing
seasons     Long nights
are more sport than rest     Look
at the dark and its supple
shapes
          Isn’t the moon ripe
steely as an iron bit
Vigilant as the community     armed
and encouraged
 
								Where Black:
Opening the day
In the crevices of Father’s hard working palms
A quiet outline between water and land
Grandmother’s womb
               In the soil that holds her first-born child
Suspending each dead star in time
     Just ahead 
                              Running
Behind the double-sided tongue
Watching quietly from the trees as we ruin each other
Here and here
             and here
 
								Ashaki M. Jackson is a social psychologist and poet living in Los Angeles. She is a Cave Canem and VONA alumna whose work appears in CURA, Pluck! and Prairie Schooner among others. She serves on the VIDA: Women in Literary Arts board and authored two chapter-length collections – Surveillance (Writ Large Press) and Language Lesson (MIEL).
Born in Burbank, California in 1950, with an MFA from UC Irvine in 1974, Ned Evans has lived in Venice, California since the early 1970s. Working primarily in painting in acrylic and mixed media on canvas, he has also spent years exploring photography, collage, and mixed media sculptural reliefs. He has shown throughout the United States and Europe. While his work is unquestionably influenced by the Southern California landscape, ultimately and inevitably his reconstructing and building edifices and foundations, on top of which exist the nuances of illusion and light.