Substantiation, Part 1 Poem by Jake Adam York

Substantiation, Part 1



The sheriff says it wasn't Till we pulled from the river,
that man was as white as I am, white as cotton
blowed by the cotton gin fan that weighed him down,
looked like he'd lain there weeks, not a kid at all.
He was a stranger just out of Money, recalled
by a store clerk, a hobo, and a crossroad guitarist.
The reporter finds them at the once abandoned crossing.
They say it's like the sheriff says, came up one night,
headed Clarksdale way, another one, hat pulled down,
right behind. Three days later, the bluesman says,
a plague of starlings gathered into little boys
those who fished and found the dead man's foot.
The reporter stares into his cataracted, cotton eyes.
He cannot find them, no matter where he looks.

POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
And the way the jury chose to believe the ridiculous stories of the defense. . . .
— Mamie Till, 1955

. . . with truth absent, hypocrisy and myth have flourished. . . .
—Look, January 1956
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
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Jake Adam York

Jake Adam York

United States / Florida
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