While going through the Net I came across these lines from the poem ‘The Passage’ by one of the outstanding postcolonial English poet of Nigeria, indeed whole of Africa: Christopher Ifekandu Okigbo(1932–1967)
solitude invites,
a wagtail, to tell
the tangled-wood-tale;
a sunbird, to mourn
a mother on a spray.
I find these lines quite evocative. Chinua Achebe writes “For while other poets wrote good poems, Okigbo conjured up for us an amazing, haunting poetic firmament of a wild and violent beauty..”. Eliot was quite an influence on Okigbo “its casual references to German, French, Italian, Latin and Greek literatures in the original languages, its acquaintance with Bhagavad Gita, Dante, St. Augustine and the chants of Siberian shamans, its unsettling existential wit, its mastery of both expository and lyrical poetic forms, Eliot’s poetry both tranquilized the heart and stimulated Okigbo’s active emulation”. Another line I came across that I absolutely loved was
Silences are melodies
Heard in retrospect
These lines below reminded me of the programs one tend to watch in wildlife channels:
Gentle hunter
his tail plays on the ground
while he crushes the skull
Beautiful death
who puts on a spotted robe
when he goes to his victim.
Playful killer
whose loving embrace
splits the antelope’s heart.
I wrote the poem Beginning (posted in the blog www.depalan.blogspot.com) yesterday morning, now as I read Okigbo I feel should dedicate the poem to him. Quite an amazing guy.
The stamp herein is of Purple throated Sunbird from Vietnam, below pic is of Purple Sunbird.