John Riley
MERCY
When I was a boy and self-born in religion my aunts,
uninterested in being washed
with the saving blood of Jesus Christ,
called me Preacher Boy.
Come Sunday mornings I traveled alone
in a white shirt, clip on navy-blue tie,
penny loafers shined the night before,
down a county dirt road studded with rocks
that jabbed through the red soil
like a reef slicing a surf.
In memory it is always cold fall.
At the end of my walk I'd wait for the bus
to the Providence Primitive Baptist Church,
practice my weekly verses, press
my wet hair back with a ten-cent black comb.I strapped myself to the word of God;
stood and swayed when hymns were sung;
wanted death to be a wool glove.
But the hold of that ancient agony collapsed
the first time I heard Cannonball Adderley
and his Sextet play "Mercy Mercy Mercy."
It was recorded live in '66. Cannonball
was gone before I heard
his funk rise from the turntable
and wash the sea of salvation away.
All was lost. What could I do?
ay spun into night!
I became blind as a fish with scales for eyes.
That touch of the dark felt right.