Bless Your Heart: Southern Border Style

Marianna Trevino Wright
2 min readJul 13, 2022

I come from Country

High and Low.

From Scotland to South Carolina to Texas,

In ships of searchers, uncertain,

And regents sowing dominion

Espoused by King James.

I come from violence and conquest.

From smallpox and privilege.

From cold, dark cellars and roadside terror.

From tiny log cabins and Others’ trails

Of tears.

From the coastal marshes and the edge of the forest

that smelled like tobacco, and sulfur and screams.

I remember the hand pump by the railroad tracks,

From which cold refreshment came

And the riding crop in the kitchen

Of my ancestral home.

My family name on the exchange,

Pappy’s foot on the scale,

Where kids and cotton once sold

For more than their weight.

Cutting switches,

For my grandmother to use on me,

In the tradition of whipping,

For stripes and for shame.

Tilling fields of arrowheads,

Br’er Rabbit and lies,

An “inheritance” strange as molasses and

Sugar cane and rum.

The taste of moonshine,

The trill of the owl,

The rattle in the timber,

And the musk of the men

who dared not make eye contact

with a golden-haired girl.

Even then, I knew,

It was not well with my soul.

The hand-hewn pew

At the church in Indiantown.

The heavy hypocrisy.

The poison of the plantation,

Ether,

Distilled, everywhere.

The family who came here in chains,

Buried, across the road.

Bloodlines blended,

Still separated.

Held captive, on a landscape

Colored by horror.

Somehow

Tenderness came,

from Sugar and Benny and Mae.

Residents of the public housing project,

where children stopped playing,

Stood still, when I walked by,

To visit my mother’s ‘mammy’

Who read bedtime stories of

Little Black Sambo to me.

“Why weren’t we suffocated

In our cribs?”

Was the question that elicited

Rebuke that burned like a fiery brand or a

Flaming cross.

Anesthetized by Williamsburg air and age

My mother’s Liberal retort:

“No one and no thing can withstand your scrutiny!”

as if I was the cruel one.

Still segregating.

Stripping.

The wonder from my unbounded soul.

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Marianna Trevino Wright

Executive Director of the National Butterfly Center. Reluctant activist. Passionate hija de la frontera and dual citizen.