Sunday, 2 December 2012

TRANCE-SEE-SHUN



The rotten egg crack-broken,
Reeking through the corks
Locked-in on the mouths of our saggy sages.
They satiated the past in their salamislicing:
Is it about Africa? They asked
It is a twig with two horns,
Copulated through manual surgery.
Their faces were saturine.

So, we asked the bald pen of our balds,
Roaming the dregs of the present
In mere oblivion and polyandrous trance.
It was above reality
In black ink on brown pages.
Their stances drown with the dawn
Muling and puking our precepts,
In gargantua brain-washing.
Is it about the past?
“Oh, it was a yoke brandish by liquid shells
Mixed into fired quotidian historical miscarriage,
And colonial disected misery.”

The catechists joined the race,
To pull our spikes out of the spites,
In bowl-tied and hewn suits.
Indeed, they wiped our eyes of drops
That sacred pity had engendered.
But, they enchanted us with watery clog,
And package manna.

Then, we requested,
Bring in the historians with embalmed maps,
Vague directions and formulated geographical ocean spread.
Come, they told us,
“This was where your Grandfathers hid their
Bent barks and worn heads.”
What about this curved clusmy lane?
“Your Grandmothers bore your fated fathers here
And licked their bodies to quench with their rough tongues.”


The seers diced in the lots of a deem sight.
They could not look back but peep afront.
But they gave us a name;
A name beyond what we can bear:
“Oh you of the new generations afflicted by trance!”

The political boars  had a say,
At least everybody did.
“Come and see yourself in our mirror.”
It was too soon;
They infected us with electoral jaundice.

And so, when there was no solution
But iodine and plasters,
In the sores of our scores,
We see ourselves the way we are!
The breeds of western pride,
Only watching their plight on
Walls, books, and ill-documented museums.
They call it African Colonial Experience.

We diluted our colour that they call black,
With pancakes and mary kay.
We apply knives, cutlass and stitches,
To change our faces
Giving us long noses,
And white hairs.
We have grown
From the trance they inflicted on us,
We have seen ourselves,
And we shun their ways.
Still we feel the sting of their ignorance.




JOHN LAW

BlackandBeautiful

1


Had it been you were big and busty

Maybe I’d have thought

I tripped for your breasts and hips.

And let’s say you were very fair

I could have reasoned

It was just that. But… oh my, my! What spell,

What powerful spell it is that has completely

Charmed me in your black hair!

What powerful spell it is that has utterly

Captivated me in your beautiful heart!

Goodness me, when I look,

Just gaze at those natural curls—

Oh baby, you can’t be real!

Black-and-Beautiful, please tell me what spell

you’ve won my heart with! O Cute-and-Lovely!

2

When I steal a glance at you,

I see cuteness like a girl’s;

I see goodness like that of a goddess;

I see beauty, beauty like an African queen’s!

When I steal a glance at you,

I see thrice of you at once!

Now look back in my eyes,

And see you in them!

O rest your ear against my heartbeats,

And hear me in them!

And now that I look in your eyes

And stroke through your hairs

I still feel the power in them,

In your beauty, in your character

That have so drawn

My eyes and my heart after you …

And to you!

Kayode Taiwo Olla

LIFE of ironies

The beggar sleeps in the cold night, unsheltered:
The rich man suffers from insomnia in bed

The barren woman adopts another woman’s kid:

School girls flushes their fetuses into polythene bags

The adolescent virgin is tired of keeping herself:

The womanizing guy is wishing to marry a virgin when he’s through

Life!

Some people work, some people eat;

Some people steal from what is reaped.

Some babies die, some kiddies die;

Some people live as if they ain’t gonna leave!

Some people keep chaste, some people keep lose;

Some people wonder if there’s a tomorrow to protect!

Some people rape, some people eagerly open laps—

And they forget there’s always an ‘after’ waiting—or piling!

Kayode Taiwo Olla

A Lady of Virtue



If love sharpens the sword of life,
it would cut deeper and the scar          
can ever be trivial.
If life hangs limply on verge of love,
it would never fall till thy kingdom come.
Behavior, beauty linen the fabric of love,
Let us live long life laden with love.

Behavior is the connoisseur of beauty;
A woman lacked moral
and jostled out of matrimonial home.
She gnashed teeth recounting losses;
Had I known ends her journey of I don’t care.

A lady of virtue,
has her name written in marble
carrying about by the noble.
Her name is more than worth
Her weight in gold
She doesn’t need to be told
Even to the young and old
She is bold to showcase what she holds
because she came from the virtuous home of old.

But I have two questions to ask
If it’s worthy to be asked
Is there any error in trial?
Not at all, as long as it is moral.

ARE YOU THAT LADY OF VIRTUE?

Because I need to be told
Before I encase your name with gold
And bold enough to pose
Before my parent and say;
I present to you my gold
from the virtuous home of old.
 M.B.A.

Halcyon Moment


She crooned melodiously to my ear       
Like an ecstatic lullaby;
soft gentle song sung
to make a child go to sleep.
Her soft sonorous song
granted my tender mind asylum
In gaga would I be for more than a century.

She nuzzled my nipple
And my mind travelled miles
hanged limply on an empty space
between heaven and earth.
Would I ever recuperate from this love tumour?

Her sweat sprinkled and drizzled;
 And my body hair stiffened
and my wrinkles smoothened
ho! Would I ever forget this halcyon moment?
Even if I am battered by rain
And scorched by sun
Or petrified by night.
I will not but stand to say I missed that…
MBA

Riding the cockroach


The contemptuous laughter jabbed
the heart of the lovely fiend
Like a derisive moan of lovers.
The shallow craft
culminates picayune and piffle.

Rhea, Penguin rode on cockroach
And piercing the tunnel that mirrors
the globe in an eddy rotunda.

Mind thrilled; building castle in the air
Drinking to stupor from reverie gourd
Shearing with palm wine drinkered
the hallucinating fable.
  
            II
A distant cookoo echoed
Like bong dripping tone
Struck eardrum like traditional
Drum of Sango, jostling my medullar
to ponder the yonder of SAVANNAH.

The acclaimed patriot of ANTHILLS,
The vortex of crafted moral,
The harbinger of right and fortune,
A paradigm of prime

BUT

If ingratitude is the reward to patriot,
Let him carry on!
If ‘one nation’ clamoured and sustained
By premier derailed the tame,
I begin to ask!!
If stoppage of diversity gave birth
To the titular that does not have opinion
Of his own,
Let him defend it!!!

III
Maybe or maybe critics will gather
the rubble and mould the pebble
and stone the ingrate waddling in shame!


Maybe or maybe not scholars will mend
the abyss, journey down the matrix
Of the polity,
and search the rainbow
and find the colour that suits
the garment of Nigeria outfit.
                             MBA

Sacrarium




And so,
After the hour of epiclesis:
The salient moment of devotion,
Straight flew from the congregation,
Dirt……O! What looked like dirt,
Into the chalice vessel; the cup of nobles,
Nobles initiated by the smearing of unction,
And the blood,
O the blood!
Mind you, not of bullocks or calves,
Got stained and unfit,
The setting of the ‘Collect’ and ‘Doxology’
Becomes intertwined
Making the sacrifice in disorder.
Oh! Why has the church become a wasteland?
Why were the floors unceremonious?
Why are the vessels unwashed
The atmosphere corrupt,
Minds are no more intact,
Prayers are no more in fire,
Episcopal robes are now is vogue
Ecclesia est inimicus----the church is unfriendly.

Neque!
Not the church, but the world.
Who conceives in the church?
Who crowds the church?
Who pontificates in the church?
WE. You- you of course.
When you refuse t give the brotherly huge,
When the sisterly kiss of peace is flushed,
When in the spirit, you think of ‘sisi’ on the street,
When in the sacristy, you slay the spirit
When at ‘altar call’, you murder love,
When on the spiritual road, you 2go,
Then- then, the crucifix of the monastery will weep
And our bible will become ‘facebook.’

Sacrarium
Our lives are like the sacrarium,
Nay! Our lives are the sacrarium.
Once, we are saints,
Twice, its I am saved and I’ve derailed,
Thrice, it’s a game of sons and gentiles,
Whatever it is, we are saints anyway.
In us are grains of filth and sanctity,
Our lives are grazed lands where weeds shoot,
When grazed and grazed; cleared of its mess,
We change to base where we hymn DJ.
What way should we now sail
To neigh the ‘full of grace?’
Reserve the cesspit of the sacrarium
For that which lay beneath can be reconceived
And a new live, a pristine life be born.
Sacrarium,
A sepulcher for un decaying saints.
Life is a game of chess,
You muse earnestly before
Swiftly we wing away
From that perfect path we’ve been placed.
Our minds are like nomads of flocks,
It roams and wanders around diverse thoughts.
NAFDAC my poetic products
Let not the EFCC of rendition dash me,
At the village square,
Where we sit in circles,
At our conclave, where we behest,
Will I decide whether to take the oath of silence,
For speaking is for the lip,
Listening is for the ear,
Beauty is for the eyes
For time isn’t on my side
Till we meet next time.

                                              BABAJIDE literati   
 

MONALISA ANA


Every time you come,
You always leave me bored,
Each mo you saunter through this orbit,
You scholastic pedestrians don’t often keep me company.

I had always thought,
If I weren’t good enough,
Therefore, I decided to potter myself
And become a hibiscus that attracts your brandishing pollination.

Now that I’ve become the best,
Among other information channels that surround this planet,
I hope you will now leave your grievances to the past,
And we now can both
Enjoy one another’s styles.

 
        - Babajide Michael Oluwasegun

Crimes Man Commits

Where else can I go ?
Where else can I journey?
In the darkest blue moon,
In the busiest ravening cloud,
In the silent deep forest,
Or the solemn calm sea.
Who else can I call?
Maybe God,  maybe gods, maybe man.

I cry for the dilapidation of patriotism
I mourned for segregation of blackness
How unconscious are we at birth!
Or even at the selection of destiny
Why is one on the top echelon?
And others at the lower rung of the ladder
 Who else can I ask?
Maybe God, maybe gods, maybe man.

But they say everything was made by God
All in the full glare of gods
And man in the image and likeness of God
If Koran is not comprehensible
How much more bible?
Are they read in slumber or hallucination?
Who else can I question?
Maybe God, maybe gods, maybe man.

The closeness to God the closeness to clime
The book of God is full of words
The mind of man is full of crime
The gods are man used tools
gods are like unblown trumpet
That does not know the most melodious voice
Who else can I examine?
Maybe God,  maybe gods, maybe man.

The firewood of this would
Is for those who can take heart
 When criminal turned judges
The injustice justified jungle justice
The lawyer become liar in the temple of injustice
The fastest dog takes the fattest bone
The craftiest fool does the trickiest trick
Who else can I hold?
Hold responsible for injustice
Maybe God,  maybe gods, maybe man.
 
No matter how far the journey is,
No matter how bright the moon shines,
No matter how cloudy the sky possesses,
No matter how silent the forest seems,
No matter how solemn the sea calms,
No matter how man imagine himself
In his own fancy,
The twilight will draw the cotton of the DAY


                     - Mattew Bisi Adewuyi

To my Wonderful Wonder


You wonder meWhen I wandered To gather the powderTo rub your shoulder            Wonder!Why cometh at all?Why you knew you were ephemeralAll effort was to feather your nestYou didn’t allow me before you drewThe cotton on your life            Wonder!Your beautiful face a façade of illness Your little affection and unending agony for your lovers You proved us wrong when we vowedThat twenty lads will play together for centuryYour left vacuum a deep hollow in mind            Wonder! Your static shadow chase us everydayYou left us your name rings bell every hourThe scar in our mind refuses to goWonder!I still remember you childlike dispositionI remember you under the baobab tree of AjoseI remember amidst your playmatesI remember you in the early morning mist Ho! I remember bats spat on our backI remember when snake chased us out of dumpI remember you in the endless gloom of hopeHope to see, walk and dine with youBefore our creatorWander!Dust to dust you crossed the RubiconThink not the bosom and acquaintanceIt taketh no solace or revelry anymoreHow lonely you left us in the cage of agony and pain!The radiance of your face taketh two to tangoWe can only see you in the spaceNot in the full glare of our sightThe pain we forever be nursed in our mindsWonder!I solicit for your loversYour friends and enemies who withdrewWith their claims at your tombSaying the meant not to this extentOur eyes accompanied you to your tombBut could not help you back homeOur minds ran miles of retrospection            Wonder!We know you place in heavenDine and wine with angelsFlow in angelic regalia with the angelsYou worthy to be rememberedThe womb was your first tombThe tomb was your last wombAdieu!

 
                                                                                                  - Mattew Bisi Adewuyi

No Direction


Nigeria, a lad in the journey of old
Dancing and miming with full of hope
Exhume the mind whose oath is not fold
Bury the heart whose lies are as signing as case of gold
Cometh men who pretend to journey in the days of old
But I swear Ill not buy the lie they sold.

Here are we when they born the legitimate son of the house
Praise is thee who would not confuse.
Woe to the man whose children are many
He neither care nor know the direction of their journey
Tell me my father the road are many
Take the one you like, I dont know any.

But they say the old are wise, good, and caring
Am I not good, wise, caring, and cunning?
Ho! That is the adjective I didnt remember to take along
Because I forgot the race I belong
I read history it says I was born with honey
So, I know I deserve the share of the money

What you possess is not for you but for nooks and crannies
It belong to me, you and many
So, is that what you read in history?
That is nothing but cock and bull story
If you want to journey join the train of plenty
Because they dont grapple it they begin to envy

But in the day of yore cock crowed in the wee hour of morning
And sun set for farmer to return in the evening
They took cocoa and sowed the seed of crone
In the end they reaped the fruit of stone
Our own cocoa cannot grow in the desert city
Because our land is cunning and tricky

Dont tell me that Nigeria did not gain
From the business of grain
Dont tell me we suffered
When our leaders were better
We lived on cocoa only
When the good leaders are not lonely

Patriotism died with the father of ISM
But his funeral full of criticism
Let us sit on keg of gun powder
After all our lives are still in rounder
Cake is not for the common villager
Because itll put the rich in danger

O my God! I cannot do more than this
After all I came in with ease
I cannot dear Haram and boko
Because I dont want to fall like Iroko
My life is very much important
I cannot face the wrath of militant.
                                                                                      
                                                                                  - Mattew Bisi Adewuyi

Viewing From a Dark Corner


I sat down in a recluse of the bosom earth
I peeped through the tunnel to see far from within
I moved close to wall to hear from rambling voice of loosed hope
I wandered along the bank and listened to low placid voice of river
I ran towards forest to hear sonorous song of birds
But only heard painful sonorous mourning

Only to be told our real enemy is within our walls
We are women treated like orange
Sought and plucked while still fresh
Only to be discarded once the juice is gone
We are suffering and smiling on the terrestrial ground of thorns
Our yells replaced by quiet moans of pleasure

As our body joined the thorns in a great rhapsody of love
Our birds flew from tree to tree in ray shadow of hope
Entertaining the tragic lovers with their sonorous coos
Our neck is rammed to walls like lovers in the night club
Jerking violently like the epileptic automobile of a reckless driver
But in the morning, we have nothing to show for it
We are rather of ignorance and gullibility
We opened our laps for them to rape us
We are gluttons to be flashed with stones
And in turn went away with our gold.
A child does not tell his father the history of the ancestors
But here, we have much in our reservoirs
We read much of Gladys May Casley-Hayford “Rejoice”
We read much of Dennis Chukude Osadebay “Who Buys My Thoughts”
And of Gabriel Okara “Piano and Drums”
Wole Soyinka “Death in the Dawn”
Lanrie Peters “We Have Come Home”

George Awoonor-Williams “Song of Sorrow”
Kofi Awoonor “The Weaver Bird”
J.P. Clark “Night Rain”
Niyi OSundare “Siren”
Femi Fatoba “The Road to Abuja”
Odia Ofeimun “Go tell the Generals”

Are we not lessoned enough?
Enough! Enough of transcend tossing around
We said lets expel the fox
Before reprimanding the chick from wandering
It stands on the dias like eagle hovering over carcass

We sleep for centuries and relish in slumber
Our oath mouth has turned to dog-nose
We long await the relic sustained injury
Injuries of mind, soul, dream and hope
Of the past, present, and generation to come.

                                                   - Mattew Bisi Adewuyi

My Beloved Country


You never abashed amidst the perfunctory embarrassment
You don’t reject the ungrateful benefactor fiend
In your open glare,  they explore.
In your silent mood,  they conjure.
Your womb at least does not revolt
Your humbleness taketh for granted in quote.
How on earth ’ll thy keep mute
In the various battery of ingratitude?



Ho! Taketh no more the slap
Humble no more the hiccup
Small not for appreciation
Bigger not  for celebration
Under duress your children tolerate
Hunted not in deliberate
Your plan dampened theirs reopened
The will for many thieved.



Weep not for your losses
Keep joy for your roses
You are gentle in mind and soul
Your children grumble for retreat
Count not your loses
But cuddle and carry your cruses
You born bastards and legitimates
Who appreciate and depreciate


 Patriotic in heart and patriotic indeed
Unfortunate in birth and grow and sick
You are not unfortunate to bear
The insubordinate in queer.
In emptiness they grow
And in forgetful they flow
Born for nothing children of shame
Who don’t  remorse in crime.



- Mattew Bisi Adewuyi