I. The Beginning
Earth, your origin transcends the vapid
Proposal of primal prostitution
Between the cloud and dust, or
The aftermath of the heavy sinkage.
You are the bed on which water of
Life reclines: you are the root of life.
My palm brushes past your claybed
And my body stands erect as a wall
Before the origin of its bricks.
II. Caryatid
I shall sing often of your fortitude,
Earth, as the caryatid of life’s burden.
I shall strap myself on your broad back
And sing of your fecund womb.
Tonight, I shall wait gently on the plinth
And watch the sky send emissaries of light
To sing the grace of your green hairs.
I wear myself in your colour, and sail
Beneath the waves scending above
The aquatic… and sing of you as haven
Of the living and the dead.
III. Lamentations
My gong cries your silent groans
Over the alopecic shaving of your green
Head. But ears of men rest upon the shoulders
Of shrugs. I weep the trauma of your haplessness
Against the penetration of iron phalluses
Reaching deep down your fragile bowel.
Who waits
For the obituary of the earth?
Man waits for the obituary of the earth.
But the earth rebounds, and shakes off
The garment of dust and rust; the liquid
Fingers of the sky splices it again into its greenness.
Who waits
For the obituary of the earth?
You may pollute mother earth with barrenness,
But the earth will rise again.
Who waits for the obituary of the earth
Meets her collecting his body as manure. But
The earth will never die.
But man is a stubborn goat:
He marauds the barn of Earth’s fury
And consumes the tubers of cancerous yams.
IV. Homecoming
When the origin of the seas calls back
The runnel in my body, and
The sky seeks back my soul, O mother
Earth, receive my stiff homecoming
At the expiration of my breath,
And perform the grafting that carries The ritual of my rebirth.