may sprout in today's wastelands,
   and thriving cities dissolve
   in sudden mirages
   and the ready-reckoners at court
   will calculate their gain
   and our loss, and make us
   any-number-of-million-they-like strong!
   Flying
   (for Niyi Osundare)
   Something in altitude kindles power-thirst
   Mere horse-height suffices the emir
   Bestowing from rich folds of prodigious turban
   Upon crawling peasants in the dust
   Rare imperceptible nods enwrapped
   In princely boredom.
   I too have known
   A parching of that primordial palate,
   A quickening to manifest life
   Of a long recessive appetite.
   Though strapped and manacled
   That day I commanded from the pinnacle
   Of a three-tiered world a bridge befitting
   The proud deranged deity I had become.
   A magic rug of rushing clouds
   Billowed and rubbed its white softness
   Like practiced houri fingers on my sole
   And through filters of its gauzy fabric
   Revealed wonders of a metropolis
   Magic-struck to fairyland proportions.
   By different adjustments of vision
   I caused the clouds to float
   Over a stilled landscape, over towers
   And masts and smoke-plumed chimneys;
   Or turned the very earth, unleashed
   From itself, a roaming fugitive
   Beneath a constant sky Then came
   A sudden brightness over the world,
   A rare winter's smile it was, and printed
   On my cloud carpet a black cross
   Set in an orb of rainbows. To which
   Splendid nativity came—who else would come
   But gray unsporting Reason, faithless
   Pedant offering a bald refractory annunciation?
   But oh what beauty! What speed!
   A chariot of night in panic flight
   From Our Royal Proclamation of the rites
   Of day! And riding out Our procession
   Of fantasy We slaked an ancient
   Vestigial greed shriveled by ages of dormancy
   Till the eyes exhausted by glorious pageantries
   Returned to rest on that puny
   Legend of the life jacket stowed away
   Of all places under my seat.
   Now I think I know why gods
   Are so partial to heights—to mountain
   Tops and spires, to proud iroko trees
   And thorn-guarded holy bombax,
   Why petty household divinities
   Will sooner perch on a rude board
   Strung precariously from brittle rafters
   Of a thatched roof than sit squarely
   On safe earth.
   Epilogue
   He Loves Me; He Loves Me Not
   “Harold Wilson he loves
   me he gave me
   a gun in my time
   of need to shoot
   my rebellious brother. Edward
   Heath he loves
   me not he's promised a gun
   to his sharpshooting
   brother viewing me
   crazily through ramparts
   of white Pretoria…. It
   would be awful
   if he got me.” It was
   awful and he got
   him. They headlined it
   on the BBC spreading
   indignation through the
   world, later that day
   in emergency meeting his
   good friend Wilson and Heath
   his enemy crossed swords
   over him at Westminster
   and sent posthaste Sir Alec to Africa
   for the funeral.
   Dereliction
   I quit the carved stool
   in my father's hut to the swelling
   chant of saber-tooth termites
   raising in the pith of its wood
   a white-bellied stalagmite
   Where does a runner go
   whose oily grip drops
   the baton handed by the faithful one
   in a hard, merciless race? Or
   the priestly elder who barters
   for the curio collector's head
   of tobacco the holy staff
   of his people?
   Let them try the land
   where the sea retreats
   Let them try the land
   where the sea retreats
   We Laughed at Him
   We laughed at him our
   hungry-eyed fool-man with itching
   fingers who would see farther
   than all. We called him
   visionary missionary revolutionary
   and, you know, all the other
   naries that plague the peace, but
   nothing would deter him.
   With his own nails he cut
   his eyes, scraped the crust
   over them peeled off his priceless
   patina of rest and the dormant
   fury of his dammed pond
   broke into a cataract
   of blood tumbling down
   his face and chest…. We
   laughed at his screams the fool-man
   who would see what eyes
   are forbidden, the hungry-eyed
   man, the look-look man, the
   itching man bent to drag
   into daylight fearful signs
   hidden away for our safety
   at the creation of the world.
   He was always against
   blindness, you know, our quiet
   sober blindness, our lazy—he called
   it—blindness. And for
   his pains? A turbulent, torrential
   cascading blindness behind
   a Congo river of blood. He sat
   backstage then behind his flaming red
   curtain and groaned in
   the pain his fingers unlocked, in the
   rainstorm of blows loosed on his head
   by the wild avenging demons he
   drummed free from the silence of their
   drum-house, his prize for big-eyed greed.
   We sought by laughter to drown
   his anguish until one day
   at height of noon his screams
   turned suddenly to hymns
   of ecstasy. We knew then his pain
   had risen to the brain
   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 giv 
					     					 			e 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
   The Igbo people around my hometown, Ogidi, had an annual observance called Oso Nwanadi. On the night preceding it, all able-bodied men in the village took flight and went into hiding in neighboring villages in order to escape the ire of Nwanadi or dead kindred killed in war.
   Although the Igbo people admire courage and valor they do not glamorize death, least of all death in battle. They have no Valhalla concept; the dead hero bears the living a grudge. Life is the “natural” state; death is tolerable only when it leads again to life—to reincarnation. Two sayings of the Igbo will illustrate their attitude toward death:
   A person who cries because he is sick, what will they do who are dead?
   Before a dead man is reincarnated an emaciated man will recover his flesh.
   A Wake for Okigbo
   This poem is an elaboration of a traditional Igbo dirge.
   In some parts of Igbo land the death of a young person was first publicized by members of his or her age grade chanting through the village in a make-believe search for their missing comrade, who they insisted was only playing hide-and-seek with them.
   The refrain of their chant, nzomalizo, is made up of zo, which means hide, and mali, which is a playful sound. The repeat of zo and the linking mali complete the effect of hiding in play. Ugboko is the personification of the tropical forest, while Iyi personifies the stream. Ogbonuke is the embodiment of ill will and catastrophe.
   Love Song (for Anna)
   LINE 8: Leaves of cocoyam come in handy for wrapping small and delicate things. For instance, before storage, kola nuts are wrapped in cocoyam leaves to preserve them from desiccation. However, cocoyam leaves are not for rough handling as Vulture learned to his cost when he received from the hands of an appeased Sky a bundle of rain wrapped in them to take home to drought-stricken Earth.
   Beware, Soul Brother
   LINE 10: abia drums beaten at the funeral of an Igbo titled man. The dance itself is also called abia and is danced by the dead man's peers while he lies in state and finally by two men bearing his coffin before it is taken for burial; so he goes to his ancestors by a final rite de passage in solemn paces of dance.
   Misunderstanding
   The Igbo people have a firm belief in the duality of things. Nothing is by itself, nothing is absolute. “I am the way, the Truth, and the Life” would be meaningless in Igbo theology. They say that a man may be right by Udo and yet be killed by Ogwugwu; in other words, he may worship one god to perfection and yet fall foul of another.
   Igbo proverbs bring out this duality of existence very well. Take any proverb that puts forward a point of view or a “truth” and you can always find another that contradicts it or at least puts a limitation on the absoluteness of its validity.
   Lazarus
   LINE 12: Ogbaku: Many years ago a strange and terrible thing happened in the small village of Ogbaku. A lawyer driving on the highway that passes by that village ran over a man. The villagers, thinking the man had been killed, set upon the lawyer and clubbed him to death. Then to their horror, their man began to stir. So, the story went, they set upon him too and finished him off, saying, “You can't come back having made us do that.”
   Those Gods Are Children
   The attitude of Igbo people to their gods is sometimes ambivalent. This arises from a worldview that sees the land of the spirits as a territorial extension of the human domain. Each sphere has its functions as well as its privileges in relation to the other. Thus a man is not entirely without authority in dealing with the spirit world nor entirely at its mercy. The deified spirits of his ancestors look after his welfare; in return he regularly offers them sustenance in the form of sacrifice. In such a reciprocal relationship one is encouraged (within reason) to try to get the better of the bargain.
   Lament of the Sacred Python
   LINE 10: acknowledged my face in broken dirges: One of the songs that accompany the dead to the burial place at nightfall has these lines:
   Look a python! Look a python!
   Python lies across the way!
   LINE 24: creation's day of gifts: We all choose our gifts, our character, our fate from the Creator just before we make our journey into the world. The sacred python did not choose (like some other snakes) the terror of the fang and venom, and yet it received a presence more overpowering than theirs.
   Their Idiot Song
   The Christian claim of victory over death, is to the unconverted villager, one of the really puzzling things about the faith. Are these Christians just naive or plain hypocritical?
   He Loves Me; He Loves Me Not
   Lines provoked by the news that a street in the Nigerian city of Port Harcourt had been named after Britain's prime minister Harold Wilson.
   Dereliction
   This poem is in three short movements. The first is the inquirer (onye ajuju); the second, the mediating diviner (dibia), who frames the inquiry in general terms; and the third is the Oracle.
   We Laughed at Him
   LINE 36: wild avenging demons: This refers to the story of Tortoise and the miraculous food drum offered him in spirit land in compensation for his palm nut that one of the spirit children has eaten. After long use (and misuse) the drum ceases to produce any more feasts when it is beaten. Whereupon Tortoise blatantly contrives a reenactment of his first visit to spirit land. But this time the spirits (fully aware, no doubt, of his greed) take him to a long row of hanging drums and allow him to pick one for himself. As you would expect, he picks the largest and lumbers away under its great weight. Home at last, he makes elaborate arrangements for a feast and then beats the drum. No food comes; instead demons armed with long whips emerge and belabor him to their satisfaction.
   The element of choice is a recurrent theme in Igbo folklore, especially in man's dealings with the spirit world. We are not forced; we make a free choice.
   AN ANCHOR BOOKS ORIGINAL, AUGUST 2004
   Copyright © 1971, 1973, 2004 by Chinua Achebe
   All rights reserved under International and Pan-American
   Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States
   by Anchor Books, a division of Random House, Inc.,
   New York.
   Anchor Books and colophon are registered trademarks
   of Random House, Inc.
   Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
   Achebe, Chinua.
   [Poems]
   Collected poems / Chinua Achebe.
   p. cm.
   eISBN: 978-0-307-51791-3
   1. Nigeria—Poetry. I. Title.
   PR9387.9.A3A17 2004
   821′.914—dc22
   2004040986
   www.anchorbooks.com
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