The Geez by Nii Parkes (best books for students to read .TXT) 📗
- Author: Nii Parkes
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like kpakpo shitɔ spreading jealous
green in the ripeness of my heart –
add not salt to my pain;
kɛ i’sui aka shwɛ. Do not
bury my passions in ŋmlitsa – hard,
formless and scorching in the sun
for I have loved you too much
to merit such disdain.
Kai’mɔ fɔfɔi ni n’kɛ ba o’shia,
smiles we shared over ngai’s spat crackle
the songs we sang together, voices
as warm as water in a gbudugbaŋ,
already past language,
violating taboos as we shared kɔmi
kɛ shitɔ with maŋ –
kai mɔ mi nakai’o
kai mɔ mi nakai.
Kɛ i’tsui aka shwɛ. Do not
linger in the wind of our union
like a basket
of didɛ shala;
kaa ha ni e’tɔmi
tamɔ wolɛɛnyo yɛ hunu mli.
Ofainɛ kɛ obaa shi mi’ɛ yaa.
Kɛ i’tsui aka shwɛ;
don’t keep leaving and coming back
like a gbogbalo, doing a dance I do not
understand, for I love you
too much to learn
to love you again.
Dark Spirits
Home half drunk but with some degree
of faculty left you find your exes naked
in bed with the woman you're seeing now She's her
best journalist self soft lamplight lapping her
skin's contours as she turns from the lawyer to ask
the anthropologist about shame in cultures that cleave
tight to commensality The sculptor is studying the clay
of her own nipples her calves resting on the microbiologist's
thighs They pay you no mind not even the blues
singer who said she would die for you not even
when you strip and perform that ridiculous party trick
with your dick no hands as you make the little thing
dance left to right that the novelist adores You
sulk as the debate shifts to patriarchy voices
rising as they coax and challenge leer and laugh
resonant as they agree on your status as a sincere
but flawed feminist a sympathiser they say
The chemistry lecturer spots you eventually
points The Kahlo scholar ignites a fire right
in the middle of the bed and their fingers like
a hundred licking flames beckon you You feel
the heat of the equator as you lean back mattress
buckles the red of the fire pulling your locks
making you scream Before your fantasies can come
alive they turn to envelop you like caterpillars on
sweet fruit you disappear in the amber of their fusion
When morning comes your room is rich suffused
with the burn and treacly aftertaste of dark dark spirits
Eaux
Oscura y sus obras
i
Three primary colours mixed
in a shallow pot. A blackness
beyond the reach of a scorpion’s sting.
I am yet to meet the being
who can unmix paint, restore
the pure pigment the brush’s tongue flicked.
ii
For venom’s cure comes from venom,
from fangs jibbed like a fountain pen’s nib,
is collected in a hollow, injected by hydraulics.
I say I am a dreamer who fills spaces
with wild doodlings; I place diamonds
in the charcoal of sketches, laughter
in bursts of gloom, but God! Who knew
the power that children have
to expand air, to set a ship adrift?
iii
A brush might ask its bearer: which is
darker at night – sea or sky? A body knows
which dark swallows it whole, but will stay
silent. There is a word for that. I go to bed thinking
there is so much space in the world.
Where are the bony legs to kick me, the questions
that punctuate the black like stars? How long
to fill a canvas with textures of night
without hints of blue, streaks of yellow,
the ballast of its memory of sunset’s bruise?
iv
One day I’m in a café writing a poem
about arachnids, sketching eight legs
because words are slow to come.
A kid comes over to ask what I’m doing,
his skin dark as my daughter’s, his dimple
like my son’s. I’m trying to fill the space,
I say, looking at my page, the black paint of brooding.
v
If the scene were painted again, the jib
sail rippling gently with air, the vessel silhouetted,
the sun red as a crying eye and sinking,
the water’s gleam a smooth carapace... Even
with what it knows now, with the pain to come,
the nights vast as three empty beds, my flesh
would still enter the damp, be swallowed
by its mood until the body, again, moves.
Caress
i
If I speak often of gardening and day’s
slow rise behind the creep of morning sun,
it is because somewhere along my thigh lies
the memory of a tomato plant’s jagged leaf
nibbling at my skin at dawn, your hand steady
at my shoulder, your voice gentle in my ear,
pointing out tiny buds that will turn to flower
then fruit. I hold the faded watering can,
its silver sharp against my grip, dark as yours
as we wade between beds of onion and kale,
lettuce both green and red, aubergines that stand
high as my chest – and all the while time unfurls;
birds bicker in the guava tree behind us, doors
crack open, the light spreads, its lustre caressing
your tight curls as you pull a radish clean out
of the soil, shake it and bite through its red
skin to the crunch of its white flesh, passing
one half to me. We speak nothing, Okomfo,
of origins, but I know you planted all these seeds
and taught me the tender and the harsh, the art
of nurturing them. And this is all I needed
to know of love – ever: a morning before sun,
the beauty of bud, flower and fruit, a father’s voice
with birdsong, the tart white secrets in a radish’s heart.
* Okomfo – a healer or diviner, a role usually inherited
ii
Between his first word and his first love, a boy
goes to Grecian lengths to undermine his mother.
His chores undone, he creeps beyond the horizon
of her view, past milk bush and fallen, rotting petals
from bougainvillea, into the haze of dust raised
by a fury of youths playing football, waits his turn
while idle tongues run loose with tips on how to love
a woman, how to dribble from one foot to the other,
scoop the ball up with a touch light as a feather
and strike – all this before he is first called to play.
He drops a word he retains from his escapades
on bare fields
by grass-choked open drains
in patches of fruit- and flower-flecked green
of the kind cities hide like armpit hair
in the air when his mother calls
and the hand she means to place on his unkempt head,
naturally, bears no tenderness.
He scrambles
to shelter by the mongrel that will soon be struck
by lightning, the one whose tongue she despises, waits
for her rage to cool. Thus begins the tutelage
of a man, salvaged from masculinity.
And now he remembers: the strength of her shoulders;
her firm ripostes when because of her short-cropped hair
men dared call her small girl, whistle across the road;
caress of her hand on his neck as she reproved
a teacher for caning him for his forthrightness;
her anklet of coloured glass beads that never broke.
iii
It is easy to be misled when your head lies
in the lap of a lover who promises all
the things you want your life to be filled with, without
so much as a skipped heartbeat. You will learn later
that a cricket’s vow is not the same as an elephant’s, that soft
caresses at the pressure point where the ear’s flesh
meets the skin behind your high cheekbones can shapeshift
into something deadly on a whim – but for now,
how sweet it is to be loved, you believe it all.
You will live in the sun like your grandfather did,
your children will know the thud of avocados
and mangoes falling unbidden from trees at dawn,
they will speak with your tongue, they will know both your songs.
It is easy to forget in those treacle-sweet
moments, the inflection in your name that signals
you have ancestors still owed for their hard labour
in the split rock and damp of
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