Black Boys Play the Classics
The most popular “act” in
 Penn Station
 is the three black kids in ratty
 sneakers & T-shirts playing
 two violins and a cello—Brahms.
 White men in business suits
 have already dug into their pockets
 as they pass and they toss in
 a dollar or two without stopping.
 Brown men in work-soiled khakis
 stand with their mouths open,
 arms crossed on their bellies
 as if they themselves have always
 wanted to attempt those bars.
 One white boy, three, sits
 cross-legged in front of his
 idols—in ecstasy—
 their slick, dark faces,
 their thin, wiry arms,
 who must begin to look
 like angels!
 Why does this trembling
 pull us?
 A: Beneath the surface we are one.
 B: Amazing! I did not think that they could speak this tongue.
Copyright Credit: Toi Derricotte, “Black Boys Play the Classics” from Tender. Copyright ©1997 by Toi Derricotte. All rights are controlled by the University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, www.upress.pitt.edu. Used by permission of University of Pittsburgh Press.
Source: Tender (1997)


