A Kind of Strange People

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Because we did not understand the cruelty

Of the world, we gave our hearts to strangers.

The softness of our palms, the raging loneliness

In the gap between our teeth, how the wind,

In its music, caresses the skin of despair,

How on lonely nights like these, we watch

Men fallout from sunsets, voices stuck in their

Throats and none of them wanted a life bigger

Than the stretching of a simple sentence.

Small as we were, we knew what magic came

From the mouth of our mothers, we knew how

Much kindness the world needed to fill its pulse

With tenderness. On nights like these, in the small

City of villages bent into the darkness of things,

We will hold our hands, time interlinked in the beats

Of our hearts like the slow music of waters touching

The silky edges of thirsty throat, like light bursting

Into an indigo of every glitter not gold, we will

Hold ourselves, your fate in mine, my destiny in yours

Like strangers in a broken country, like beautiful stars

Destined to touch the rusts of silence and make it music.

Magdalene Agweven

Magdalene Agweven

Magdalene Agweven is a Nigerian poet and writer whose first book is billed for release in Q1 of 2025. She grew up on African folklore and keenly developed a knack for penning poems and weaving stories, something that has remained a strong point even in her career as a teacher. Her poetry is vast, but in fiction, she majorly writes children’s stories, although she is also big on speculative fiction bothering on African jujuism. Her influences include Toni Morrison, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Nnedi Okorafor, Chinua Achebe, and J.P. Clark.