A Poem by Dennis Brutus

4
Particularly in a single cell,
but even in the sections
the religious sense asserts itself;

perhaps a childhood habit of nightly prayers
the accessibility of Bibles,
or the awareness of the proximity of death:

and, of course, it is a currency -
pietistic expressions can purchase favours
and it is a way of suggesting reformation
(which can procure promotion);

and the resort of the weak
is to invoke divine revenge
against a rampaging injustice;

but in the grey silence of empty afternoons
it is not uncommon
to find oneself talking to God.

- Dennis Brutus
Letters to Martha and Other Poems from a South African Prison

google to find out who or what you are

directions: type “[your name] is”, including the quotes, into a google search. cut-and-paste the first ten responses that work. just pull the answers right out of the excerpt google shows you, don’t click the link and search around. the only rule is that each one has to start with “[your name] is…”

will is the best revenge
will is a legal document designating the transfer of your property and assets
will is lawlessness
will is right
will is the effect of divine grace inwardly bestowed
will is way off-base on this one.
will is held invalid,
will is not enough
will is enough
will is not a necessary fiction