God Punish You, Lord Lugard - Poems by Ogaga Ifowodo
- By Ogaga Ifowodo
- Published May 27, 2005
- Poetry
-
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Ogaga Ifowodo
And now to Ogaga Ifowodo. Lawyer, poet, diminutive scourge of dictators? Ifowodo was arrested and imprisoned (with Akin Adesokan, also on this website) by Sani Abacha for his civil rights activism which started in his student days at the university. Among other things, he is a fellow of the Heinrich Boll Foundation, Honorary Fellow in Writing of the University of Iowa, honorary member of the PEN Centres in Germany, Canada and the US (with the last naming him the 1998 recipient of The Barbara Goldsmith Freedom-to-Write Award) and the first recipient of the Free Word Award of Poets of All Nations based in the Netherlands. He is the author of Homeland (German-English), Homeland and other Poems (winner, Association of Nigerian Authors Poetry Prize) and Madiba (awaiting publication). Ogaga has had articles and poems published in newspapers, journals and anthologies around the world. He is currently in the US to advance work on his prison memoirs and later in the year begin the MFA program in creative writing at Cornell.
View all Entries by Ogaga IfowodoMy Prison Bed
The first night gave signs of what was to come.
A reed mat on bare concrete, sand shovelled
in by foot from a beachy frontage, showed
what little room for comfort between flesh
and floor. Elbow for pillow, I smuggled
a dream of liberty into the small
fraction of night for which a trained army
of mosquitoes was ready to spill blood.
At dawn, five fingers pressed on the right cheek
branded me with ill-presumed tribal marks,
leaving me wondering why, seeing that Akin
with the right to the marks had a clean cheek.
You could say the first night was glorious, gave
a false picture, if spent in an office
whose chairs were made to vacate their tables; yes,
you could say we merely slept on duty!
No pampering place awaited us where we
were driven the second night. Stripped
now of all belongings but sleeping clothes,
the jailer's "Not exactly like your bed
at home", aimed at soothing two forlorn nights
in a row, mocked with uncommon cruelty,
the unhappy end of a journey home.
The worked steel barrier clanged, clicked shut its huge
and black padlock of Chinese make, shaking
the fog of tiredness out of our heads.
The room was, admittedly, large, nothing
close to the pride-of-place cell of prison
notes. And there were windows, telling clearly
that breathing was no offence. A sofa
nearing complete collapse, the bare steel props
of a giant close-circuit monitor,
testified to a once-furnished room, just
as the broken down air-conditioner,
the boarded space for another, and peeled
stays of carpet, described the conversion
from room to cell. We found our beddings - six
square pieces of foam, which could have been
cushions in happier days, and another
one, longer but thinner, and too narrow
for two. I made bed with it, a cushion
gained as I put it where no pressed bottom
could fart on it. Exhaustion dropped me down
to sleep, only to be sprung to my feet
in an instant by the foul smell of the
pillow. I moved beneath the flourescent
to examine the beddings with wakeful
calm, having perished the thought of sniffing
the entire bed. Under the light, they seemed
a salvage of the dung-heap, drenched and dried
under rain and sun, spat and pissed upon
to suit them to prisoners and their needs.
One such prisoner, I presume, startled
out of a wet dream, sprayed his vital fluids
to draw lines and ringed blotches on the foam.
Any sleep this night or the nights to come
lay in this bed or bare concrete without
a mat. I turned the foam, beat and brushed it
with a broom, turned also the foul pillow
and made peace with the smells of sleep in prison.
Ogaga Ifowodo
4 December 1997
Unmarked Hours Beat their Hands Against the Wall
Unmarked hours beat their hands against the wall
grieve for wings plunged in a waterfall.
Outside the window, a woman's shoulders
quake in tribute to a scene of soldiers:
teeth, fragments of flesh in warm blood painted
the picture she sees of those that fainted.
A single call to prayer, amplified
to all of Sin Town, brings mortified
legions to banal rites of righteousness.
As the minister swears his piousness
birds blessed with greater freedom flee our skies
abandoning us to death and muted cries.
Philosophies of suffering dress the walls
of this cell, make the fate of dead seagulls
happier than of failed hearts that bled and wept:
"If men were God!" that mocked the cliff and leapt,
crying out their grief: "Let Nigeria end now!"
No one will inquire who, why or how,
an old or new decree has sanctified
all wrongs in duty personified.
Unmarked days quench their suns, black into nights
and dreams enact weighted hearts in free flights.
Ogaga Ifowodo
November 1997
As In Athens
Under the old tree - ancient, having drunk
the earth's dew before I groped for her breast -
they sit over tobacco and rude gin.
At the waist of the tree, where gods have their mouth
present offerings slobber down over the old,
freshen the browned blood of yester-tributes.
A breeze combs the green hair of coconut,
orange and mango trees hedging the yard
with the scent of the sea, combs, too, grey hairs.
With a warm heart and a cold eye on all
that passed and passes between earth and sky,
that could dwell in the air, land or water,
white beards read the mist of ages past
and present. And begins poetry and proverbs.
Under the big old tree. As in Athens.
Ogaga Ifowodo
10 February, 1998
(From Madiba, my second collection).