Close Talking: A Poetry Podcast

Episode #084 Cinco De Mayo - Luis J. Rodríguez

12.28.2019 - By Cardboard Box Productions, Inc.Play

Download our free app to listen on your phone

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play

To wrap up 2019, Connor and Jack take on a poem as exquisite in its craft as it is emotionally forceful in its effect on the reader. They discuss the history of the United States' colonial expansion, the danger of using oblique language when writing history, and the way the poem's tone bridges the gap between the past and present.

More about Luis J. Rodriguez, here: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/luis-j-rodriguez

Cinco de Mayo

By: Luis J. Rodriguez

Cinco de Mayo celebrates a burning people,

those whose land is starved of blood,

civilizations which are no longer

holders of the night. We reconquer with our feet,

with our tongues, that dangerous language,

saying more of this world than the volumes

of textured and controlled words on a page.

We are the gentle rage; our hands hold

the stream of the earth, the flowers

of dead cities, the green of butterfly wings.

Cinco de Mayo is about the barefoot, the untooled,

the warriors of want who took on the greatest army

Europe ever mustered—and won.

I once saw a Mexican man stretched across

an upturned sidewalk

near Chicago's 18th and Bishop one fifth of May day.

He brought up a near-empty bottle

to the withering sky and yelled out a grito

with the words: ¡Que viva Cinco de Mayo!

And I knew then what it meant—

what it meant for barefoot Zapoteca indigenas

in the Battle of Puebla and what it meant for me

there on 18th Street among los ancianos,

the moon-faced children and futureless youth

dodging the gunfire and careening battered cars,

and it brought me to that war

that never ends, the war Cinco de Mayo

was a battle of, that I keep fighting,

that we keep bleeding for, that war

against a servitude that a compa

on 18th Street knew all about

as he crawled inside a bottle of the meanest

Mexican spirits.

Find us on Facebook at: facebook.com/closetalking


Find us on Twitter at: twitter.com/closetalking


Find us on Instagram: @closetalkingpoetry

You can always send us an e-mail with thoughts on this or any of our previous podcasts, as well as suggestions for future shows, at [email protected].

More episodes from Close Talking: A Poetry Podcast