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Kofi Awoonor

Lament of the Silent Sisters a Poem By Kofi Awoonor

Lament of the Silent Sisters

Written By Kofi Awoonor

(For Chris Okigbo, the well-known poet, killed in 1967 in the Nigerian civil war).

That night he came home, he came unto me

at the cold hour of the night

Smelling of corn wine in the dawn dew.

He stretched his hand and covered my forehead.

There was a moon beam sparking rays in particles.

The drummer boys had got themselves a goat.

The din was high in the wail of the harvest moon.

The flood was up gurgling through the fields

Birth waters swimming in floods of new blood.

He whispered my name in far echo

Sky-wailing into a million sounds

across my shores. His voice still bore

the sadness of the wanderer

To wail and die in a soft lonely echo

That echo I heard long ago

In the fall of night over my river,

In the distant rustle of reeds

At growth in the strength of my river.

Once upon an evening I heard it

Strung clear as the gong of the drummer boys

Bright burnished like the glint edge of

the paschal knife, ready anxious to cut

My cords and enter into my fields.

I was still a dream then

Carried by the flimsy whiffs

Of sweet scents borne aloft on the vision

Of my coming flood

That will bear me slowly and gently

Into his world of smiles and smells.

He was not very gentle with me

But I did not complain. The thrust

was hard and angry, severing the tiny cord

Shattering the closed gates of raffia

Gathering at its eye the reeds to feed my fishes.

My flood had not risen.

The canoe carried on the strength

Of his man rowed steep down my river

into a tumultuous eternity

Of green hills and mountains

That reeled and rolled to the river shore

To clasp and bear me away.

Then the floodgates opened

for justice to cleanse to purify

My evening of awakening

In the turbulence of his triumph

Into the bright evening of my rebirth.

The birth was tedious

The pangs were bitter

Into the bright evening I rushed

Crying I have found him I have found him.

He stood there rustling in the wind

The desire to go was written large upon his forehead.

I was not ready for his coming

I was not ready for his loneliness,

for his sad solitude against the rustling wind.

I was not ready for his entrance

Into my fields and shores of my river.

The entrance of raffia was closed

closed against his lonely solitude.

He stood beneath my entrance

In his approach I knew the steps he took

Like the departing Lazarus

Marching toward his grave.

I was not ready.

The flood was gurgling at his estuary

swimming within me birth waters

warmed by his coming. He was silent

mute against the rushing of the wind

to cry and die for his homeland.

My flood had not risen then.

Across my vastness he marched into the wind

his arms folded upon his chest,

his eyes searching for the gates

that will open his amulets

to snatch and wear his talisman of hope.

He marched into the wind

howling through door posts

to catch the boatman at the dawn point.

to ferry him across my river.

But I was not ready.

My hands stretched to cover his

in the darkness, to cover his eyes

in the agony of his solitude

to call him names I knew

to put the dressing from my womb

upon his cudgel scars,

to hold his hand in the clasp of nightfall.

He was mute; the wind had stopped rustling

He was erect like the totem pole of his household

He burned and blazed for an ending

Then I was ready. As he pierced my agony

with his cry, my river burst into flood.

My shores reeled and rolled

to the world’s end, where they say

at the world’s end the graves are green.

Read Also: NON-commitment a Poem By Chinua Achebe

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Poet Nazir is a writer and an editor here on ThePoetsHub. Outside this space, he works as a poet, screenwriter, author, relationship adviser and a reader. He is also the founder & lead director of PNSP Studios, a film production firm.

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