|  | 
 
 
 
| Kέnwigbara, Several times I’ve thought of you.
 I think of your battered harbors,
 Memories of colonial cultivations
 On the affluent oil river;
 I think of your narrow-potopotric
 Streets endangered more by
 The debris of their old castles;
 
 Kέnwigbara,
 I think of your mud-thatch huts
 Seasoned by time and bullets,
 Sloshed by concocted
 Idiosyncrasies of state,
 Muddied by splashes from under
 The conqueror’s jack-boots;
 I think of those weak tinny legs
 That course your lanes day and night
 Scavenging for survival.
 
 Kέnwigbara,
 Your gates are littered with
 Dead palms and broken timbers;
 A narrow-harsh strip caresses
 Your form head-to-toe,
 Like the slavers’ chains,
 Breaking down odd defenses,
 Galvanizing spurious bloodiness;
 
 Kέnwigbara,
 I think of how hard it is for
 Your children to find their
 Bearings to your court;
 I think of your welcoming hands,
 Your liberating spells,
 And I remember how your
 Youthful radiance was
 Desecrated and slaughtered
 On the altar of forgotten times;
 
 Kέnwigbara,
 You made history in two ages.
 You were there before them.
 The currents of bu le kii slap
 
 Furiously at the tell-tales of
 Your glorious yester-days,
 Causing you to sore and stink
 Like nwi ibem-baraloo nέέ
 In the tale of yester-years;
 
 Kέnwigbara,
 The hubris of the great seeks
 Shelter in the abode of eminence;
 Dogs bark in the presence of enemies,
 It’s only in the market place of
 Carcasses that vultures dance…
 If they were decent enough,
 They would’ve known your worth,
 They would’ve cleaned and bandaged
 Your wounds… lifted you up…
 But they’re nothing but greedy lots!
 
 Kέnwigbara,
 You made history in two ages.
 You were there before them.
 You gave them their forms,
 Made them stand on mountaintops
 Now they laugh at you as dogs lick
 Your sores and vultures peck at your
 Boils, littering your emaciated frame
 With pulverized contusions… oh…
 Even as passers-by hold their nostrils,
 Spitting and cursing as they negotiate
 Your once glorious bastion… tu fia Kwa!
 
 Kέnwigbara,
 I remember how you’ve shaped
 History and how history has
 Shaped you…though fatally
 …and because I remember,
 I weep for your wounds … the
 Soiled wars constantly waged
 On you… I weep at your debasement
 I weep at your fatality
 And at your neglect!
 
 
 
 
 
 |  
 
 
 
 
 
 1  
  
 
 
 Tags You must be logged in to add tags.
 
 
 
| Writer ProfileDumletam 
 
 This user has not written anything in his panorama profile yet.
 | Comments You must be a TakingITGlobal member to post a comment. Sign up  for free or login .
 |  
 
 |