Reads Novel Online

Collected Poems

Page 43

« Prev  Chapter  Next »



and we took pity on him

the poor fool-man as he held

converse with himself. My Lord,

we heard him say to the curtain

of his blood I come to touch

the hem of your crimson robe.

He went stark mad thereafter

raving about new sights he

claimed to see, poor fellow; sights

you and I know are as impossible for this world

to show as for a hen to urinate—if one

may borrow one of his many crazy vulgarisms—

he raved about trees topped with

green and birds flying—yes actually

flying through the air—about

the Sun and the Moon and stars

and about lizards crawling on all

fours…. But nobody worries much

about him today; he has paid

his price and we don't even

bother to laugh anymore.

Mango Seedling

LINE 14: the widow of infinite faith refers to the story of the widow of Sarephath in the First Book of Kings, chapter 17.

LINE 18: Old Tortoise's miraculous feast: Once upon a time Tortoise went to work for an old woman, and at the end of his labors she set before him a bowl containing a lone cocoyam sitting on a mound of cooked green leaves. Naturally, Tortoise protested vehemently and refused to touch such a meager meal. In the end, however, he was persuaded, still protesting, to give it a try. Then he discovered to his amazement (and nearly his undoing) that another cocoyam always appeared in the bowl as soon as he ate the previous one.

LINE 24: the primordial quarrel of Earth and Sky: This was a dispute over who was sovereign. It led finally to Sky's withholding of rain for seven whole years, until the ground became hard as iron and the dead could not be buried. Only then did Earth sue for peace, sending high-flying Vulture as emissary.

Christmas in Biafra (1969)

LINE 30: new aluminum coins: A completely unsuccessful effort was made in Biafra to peg galloping prices by introducing new coins of a lower denomination than the paper money that had come in earlier. But it was too late. The market, having already settled for the five-shilling currency note as its smallest medium of exchange, paid no heed to the new coins.

An “If” of History

LINE 5: A Japanese general named Tomayuki Yamashita was hanged by the Americans at the end of the Second World War for war crimes committed by troops under his nominal command in the Philippines.

Remembrance Day



« Prev  Chapter  Next »