Beside the Lagoon - Poems by Amatoritsero (Godwin) Ede
- By Amatoritsero (Godwin) Ede
- Published May 6, 2007
- Poems
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Amatoritsero (Godwin) Ede
Amatoritsero (Godwin) Ede is a poet and MA student of literature at the Hannover University in Germany. He has had poems featured in Voices From The Fringe, Junge Nigerianische Lyrik, The Fate of Vultures (BBC Prize winning poems) and a host of journals, newspapers and magazines. He is the author of Collected Poems: A Writer's Pains & Caribbean Blues. Ede won in 1998 the All Africa Okigbo Prize for Literature. He is a founding member of the German chapter of the Association of Nigerian Authors.
View all Entries by Amatoritsero (Godwin) EdeNew breed Politician
Sun-sired sons
Who would fire
The crops of the field.
Rising sap bruises the spine
The snake of being
Strikes the psyche in poisonous green;
Green is the colour of harvest.
Royalty
Out of Royalty's way marxist fool
Bare-breasted belles dangle
To greet great passage
As I siren through
The performing monkeys chatter
My triumphant scream!
Clear riche's path,
Miserable earthling
gods tread!
Beware the sinking cities
From Abuja to Lagos
In a shroud of holy dust
Come the members of the order of the river Niger
Sour Harvest
Time will heal
What human nature has destroyed:
You were the scythe; I was the ploughshare
Twin psyches
Together we cultivated heart's richness;
Words were our crop, our thoughts were manure
Careless we
Doubts weeded in, raising poisonous sap
Along the growing stems
Until we unhappily plucked out
What we happily planted
Shrivelled to a shock of sour harvest;
We broke seeds
And I run reeling round our rolling fields
A seedling lost in the dust that is man.
Fruit Tree
Here is nature's plenty
stark on a bough.
plucked knotty children among green leaves.
I see men, half-men, tall
Above the ruins
Big children, quick to the pick,
Patriotic bastards.
And I see the weaned tree in desolation
Proud despair amongst barren tops
Hard green testicles verdigrized on wind
Eunuchs all of us.