New Haven is my home. Born in Elm Haven,
the Projects, yeah, I’m a bricksbaby, Dixwell,
raised well, grazed on the grass between the bricks,
played football on broken glass,
shit, yeah, tackle. We ain’t no pussies.
And hoops, who give a damn if they ain’t got nets?
All we needed was the hole,
and each other,
naw, that weren’t always true.
Sometimes all I needed was me
and a ball, any ball, air ball the best
‘cause you can dream it up the better…
Sure did a lot of dreamin’… Life goes by,
‘tween paintin’ job and paintin’ job, sleepin’
on my bench at the peaceful end
of the Green, seein’ them textin’ Yalies
crisscrossin’. They be seein’ the likes of me like
never.
Anyway, New Haven gotta claim me.
My legs found near State Street Station,
my arms found under Chapel Street Bridge,
my heart and guts right next to
the abandoned Salvation Army squat
where my last dreams still be chasin’
the rats off my buddies… Though.
Found out the hard way
one buddy was a rat. He think he so smart
to throw my hands and head in the harbor
so nobody know me—he think he so bad—
no fingerprints, no dental records, none
of my dreads identifyin’ me. He got away
with murder is what he think.
Well, listen good!
My voice still speakin’—I don’t need
no head to do my testifyin’, shit,
don’t even need my hands. My voice
tellin’ all New Haven—all Connecticut—
all the U. S. of A.: I am Ray Roberson.
My friends call me Bobo,
and I’m tellin’ you I ain’t homeless, I am
yours!