Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Collected Poems

    Page 3
    Prev Next


      so well those hardheaded

      men of departed dance where a man's

      foot must return whatever beauties

      it may weave in air, where

      it must return for safety

      and renewal of strength. Take care

      then, mother's son, lest you become

      a dancer disinherited in mid-dance

      hanging a lame foot in air like the hen

      in a strange unfamiliar compound. Pray

      protect this patrimony to which

      you must return when the song

      is finished and the dancers disperse;

      remember also your children

      for they in their time will want

      a place for their feet when

      they come of age and the dance

      of the future is born

      for them.

      NON-commitment

      Hurrah! to them who do nothing

      see nothing feel nothing whose

      hearts are fitted with prudence

      like a diaphragm across

      womb's beckoning doorway to bar

      the scandal of seminal rage. I'm

      told the owl too wears wisdom

      in a ring of defense round

      each vulnerable eye securing it fast

      against the darts of sight. Long ago

      in the Middle East Pontius Pilate

      openly washed involvement off his

      white hands and became famous. (Of all

      the Roman officials before him and after

      who else is talked about

      every Sunday in the Apostles' Creed?) And

      talking of apostles that other fellow

      Judas wasn't such a fool

      either; though much maligned by

      succeeding generations the fact remains

      he alone in that motley crowd

      had sense enough to tell a doomed

      movement when he saw one

      and get out quick, a nice little

      packet bulging his coat pocket

      into the bargain—sensible fellow.

      September 1970

      Generation Gap

      A son's arrival

      is the crescent moon

      too new too soon to lodge

      the man's returning. His

      feast of reincarnation

      must await the moon's

      ripening at the naming

      ceremony of his

      grandson.

      Misunderstanding

      My old man had a little saying

      he loved and as he neared

      his end was prone to relish

      more and more. Wherever Something

      stands, he'd say there also Something

      Else will stand. Heedless at first

      I waved it aside as mere

      elderly prattle that youth have to bear

      till sharply one day it hit home to me

      that never before, not even

      once, did I hear mother speak

      again in their little disputes once

      he'd said it. From then began

      my long unrest: what was this

      Thing so unanswerable and why

      was it dogged by that

      relentless Other? My mother

      proved no help at all nor did

      my father whose sole reply

      was just a solemn smile…. Quietly

      later of its own will it showed

      its face, so slowly, to me though

      not before they'd long been dead—my

      little old man and my mother

      also—and showed me too how

      utterly vain my private quest

      had been. Flushed by success

      I spoke one day in a trifling

      row: you see, my darling (to

      my wife) where Something

      stands—no matter what—there

      Something Else will take its

      stand. I knew, she said; she

      pouted her lips like a gun

      in my face. She knew, she said,

      she'd known all along of that

      other woman I was keeping in town.

      And I fear, my friends,

      I am yet to hear

      the last of it.

      Knowing Robs Us

      Knowing robs us of wonder.

      Had it not ripped apart

      the fearful robes of primordial Night

      to steal the design that crafted horns

      on doghead and sowed insurrection

      overnight in the homely beak

      of a hen; had reason not given us

      assurance that day will daily break

      and the sun's array return to disarm

      night's fantastic figurations—

      each daybreak

      would be garlanded at the city gate

      and escorted with royal drums

      to a stupendous festival

      of an amazed world.

      One day

      after the passage of a dark April storm

      ecstatic birds followed its furrows

      sowing songs of daybreak though the time

      was now past noon, their sparkling

      notes sprouting green incantations

      everywhere to free the world

      from harmattan death.

      But for me

      the celebration is make-believe;

      the clamorous change of season

      will darken the hills of Nsukka

      for an hour or two when it comes;

      no hurricane will hit my sky—

      and no song of deliverance.

      Bull and Egret

      At seventy miles an hour

      one morning down the seesaw

      road to Nsukka I came

      upon a mighty bull

      in form and carriage

      so unlike Fulani cattle—

      gaunt, high-horned, triangular

      faced—that come in herded

      multitudes from dusty savannas

      to the north…. Heavy

      was he, solitary dark

      and taciturn, one of a tribe

      they say fate has chosen

      for slow extinction. At his heels

      paced his egret, intent

      praise-singer, pure white

      all neck, walking high

      stilts and yet no higher

      than his master's leg joint….

      Odd covetousness indeed would

      leave its boundless green estates

      for a spell of petty trespassing

      on perilous asphalt laid for me…. My

      frantic blast of iron voice

      shattered their stately march, then

      recoiled brutally to my heart

      as he gathered in hasty panic

      the heaviness of his hind

      quarters, so ungainly in his

      hurry, and flung it desperate

      beyond my monstrous

      reach. I should have felt unworthy then

      playing such pranks on the noble

      elder and watching his hallowed

      waist cloth came undone had not

      his singer fared so well…. Two

      quick hops, a flap of

      wings and he was

      safe posture intact on

      brown laterite…. I could not

      bear him playing so

      faithfully my faithless agility-man, my

      scrambler to safety, throat dilated

      still by remnant praises

      of his excellency high-headed

      in delusion marching now alone

      into death's ambush…. We were

      spared, the bull and I, in our separate follies….

      His routed sunrise procession

      no doubt would reform beyond the clamor

      of my passage and sprightly

      egret take up again

      his broken adulation

      of the bull, his everlasting

      prince, his giver-in-abundance

      of heavenly cattle ticks.

      Lazarus


      We know the breathtaking

      joy of his sisters when the word

      spread: He is risen! But a

      man who has lived a full life

      will have others to

      reckon with beside his

      sisters. Certainly that keen-eyed

      assistant who has moved up

      to his table at the office, for

      him resurrection is an awful

      embarrassment…. The luckless

      people of Ogbaku knew its

      terrors that day the twin-headed

      evil strode their highway. It

      could not have been easy

      picking up again the blood-spattered

      clubs they had cast away; or to

      turn from the battered body

      of the barrister lying beside his

      battered limousine to finish off

      their own man, stirring now suddenly

      in wide-eyed resurrection…. How well

      they understood, those grim-faced

      villagers wielding their crimson

      weapons once more, how well

      they understood that at the hour

      of his rising their kinsman

      avenged in murder would turn

      away from them in obedience

      to other fraternities, would turn indeed

      their own accuser and in one

      breath obliterate their plea

      and justification! So they killed

      him a second time that day on the

      threshold of a promising resurrection.

      Vultures

      In the grayness

      and drizzle of one despondent

      dawn unstirred by harbingers

      of sunbreak a vulture

      perching high on broken

      bone of a dead tree

      nestled close to his

      mate his smooth

      bashed-in head, a pebble

      on a stem rooted in

      a dump of gross

      feathers, inclined affectionately

      to hers. Yesterday they picked

      the eyes of a swollen

      corpse in a waterlogged

      trench and ate the

      things in its bowel. Full

      gorged they chose their roost

      keeping the hollowed remnant

      in easy range of cold

      telescopic eyes….

      Strange

      indeed how love in other

      ways so particular

      will pick a corner

      in that charnel house

      tidy it and coil up there, perhaps

      even fall asleep—her face

      turned to the wall!

      … Thus the Commandant at Belsen

      Camp going home for

      the day with fumes of

      human roast clinging

      rebelliously to his hairy

      nostrils will stop

      at the wayside sweetshop

      and pick up a chocolate

      for his tender offspring

      waiting at home for Daddy's

      return….

      Praise bounteous

      providence if you will

      that grants even an ogre

      its glowworm

      tenderness encapsulated

      in icy caverns of a cruel

      heart or else despair

      for in the very germ

      of that kindred love is

      lodged the perpetuity

      of evil.

      Public Execution in Pictures

      The caption did not overlook

      the smart attire of the squad. Certainly

      there was impressive swagger in that

      ready, high-elbowed stance; belted

      and sashed in threaded dragon teeth

      they waited in self-imposed restraint—

      fine ornament on power unassailable—

      for their cue

      at the crucial time

      this pretty close-up lady in fine lace

      proved unequal to it, her first no doubt,

      and quickly turned away But not

      this other—her face, rigid

      in pain, firmly held between her palms;

      though not perfect yet, it seems

      clear she has put the worst

      behind her today

      in my home

      far from the crowded live-show

      on the hot, bleached sands of Victoria

      Beach my little kids will crowd

      round our Sunday paper and debate

      hotly why the heads of dead

      robbers always slump forward

      or sideways.

      Gods, Men, and Others

      Penalty of Godhead

      The old man's bed

      of straw caught a flame blown

      from overnight logs by harmattan's

      incendiary breath. Defying his age and

      sickness he rose and steered himself

      smoke-blind to safety.

      A nimble rat appeared at the

      door of his hole looked quickly to left and

      right and scurried across the floor

      to nearby farmlands.

      Even roaches that grim

      tenantry that nothing discourages

      fled their crevices that day on wings they

      only use in deadly haste.

      ousehold gods alone

      frozen in ritual black with blood

      of endless tribute festooned in feathers

      perished in the blazing pyre

      of that hut.

      Those Gods Are Children

      (for Gabriel Okara)

      No man who loves himself

      will dare to drink

      before his fathers' presences enshrined

      by the threshold have drunk

      their fill. A fool alone will

      contest the precedence of ancestors

      and gods; the wise wisely

      sing them grandiloquent lullabies

      knowing they are children

      those omnipotent deities.

      Take that avid-eyed old man

      full horn in veined hand

      unsteadied by age who calls

      forward his fathers tilting the horn

      with amazing skill for a hand

      so tremulous till grudging trickles

      break through white froth

      at the brim and course down

      the curved side to fine point

      of sacrifice ant-hole-size in earth:

      come together all-powerful spirits

      and drink; no need to scramble

      there's enough for all!

      Or when the offering of yams

      is due who sends the lively

      errand son to scour the barn

      and bring a sacrifice fit

      for the mighty dead! Naive

      eager to excel the child

      returns in sweat lumbering

      the heavy pride of his father's harvest:

      ignorant child, all ears and no eyes!

      is that the biggest in my barn?

      I said the biggest!

      Only then does the nimble child

      perceive a surreptitious fist quickly shown

      and withdrawn again—and break through

      wisdom's lashing cordon to welcoming smiles

      of initiation. He makes the journey

      of the neophyte to bring home a ritual

      offering as big as an egg.

      II

      Long ago a man of fury drawn

      by doom's insistent call slew

      his brother. The land and every deity

      screamed revenge: a head for a head

      and raised their spear

      to smite the town should it

      withhold the due. The man

      was ready. The elders' council

      looked at him and turned

      from him to all the orphans doubly

      doomed and shook their heads:

      the gods are right and just! This man

      shall hang but first may he


      retrieve the sagging house

      of his fathers

      and the fine points

      of the gods' spears

      returned to earth

      and he lived for years that man

      of death he raised his orphans

      he worked his homestead and his farmlands

      till evening came and laid him low

      with cruel foraging fever. Patient

      elders peering through the hut's dim

      light darkened more by smoke

      of smoldering fire under his bed

      steady-eyed at a guilt they had stalked

      across scrublands and seven rivers, a long-prepared

      hangman's loop in their hand

      quickly circled his neck

      as he died

      and the gods

      and ancestors

      were satisfied.

      III

      They are strong and to be feared

      they make the mighty crash

      in ruin like iroko's fall

      at height of noon scattering

      nests and frantic birdsong

      in damped silence of deep

      undergrowth. Yet they are fooled

      as easily as children those deities

      their simple omnipotence

      drowsed by praise.

      Lament of the Sacred Python

      I was there when lizards

      were ones and twos, child

      Of ancient river god Idemili. Painful

      Teardrops of Sky's first weeping

      Drew my spots. Sky-born

      I walked the earth with royal gait

      And crowds of human mourners

      Filing down funereal paths

      Across lengthening shadows

      Of the dead acknowledged my face

      In broken dirges of fear.

      But of late

      A wandering god pursued,

      It seems, by hideous things

      He did at home has come to us

      And pitched his tent here

      Beneath the people's holy tree

      And hoisted from its pinnacle

      A charlatan bell that calls

      Unknown monotones of revolts,

      Scandals, and false immunities.

      And I that none before could meet except

      In fear though I brought no terrors

      From creation's day of gifts I must now

      Turn on my track

      In dishonorable flight

      Where children stop their play

      To shriek in my ringing ears:

      Look out, python! Look out, python!

      Christians relish python flesh!

      And mighty god Idemili

      That once upheld from earth foundations

      Cloud banks of sky's endless waters

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026