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idiong-divine
idiong-divine
37/M/Nigeria Idiong Divine has had the rare privilege of having to teach Literary Arts in a number of learning institution in Nigeria. He is the author of numerous self-published books and chapbooks. His literary prowess is in the unswerving paradoxes and allegories.
The Corona virus Is nothing but a hybrid Of history and literature; ICT and biology And international politics. In the “Eyes of Darkness” Decades ago Was the Wuhan-400 bred In some biology laboratory in Wuhan. How it started spreading Like some malware virus Through the internet in 2020; Attacking world powers and economies. In Africa, the dark continent, The virus means nothing As the people there Have far worse viruses Living with them. There are splinters of rumours Of a few cases Here and there in Africa. We will wash our hands But we know better. The political class and governments Of Africa are far worse: They feed on Corona virus.
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Mar 19, 2020
Mar 19, 2020 at 7:45 AM UTC
Covid-19
Come away you savage city girls and boys. Come away to the natural countryside. What is it that makes you think you’re civilized? Your dry urban toil or white collar employ? That break your bones, waste your days and leave you pain? Come and feel the sleekness of nature’s valour Come and see the meekness of the wind’s colour You have around this place, but so much to gain. You boast of your club life how you drink and smoke But you know just how too often you go broke. You brag of the cars you drive but it’s funny How you’d take to fright on sighting a donkey. Your girls think they are as beautiful as they seem But come and behold a country girl after a swim No make-up, no sparkling ornaments or lace Just a soaked wrapper, dangling beads and her face. You consume too much obscene books and videos That you know nothing about your inbuilt radio. You dine with Satan everyday by your ways Though you never miss a service on church days. Such is the hypocrisy of city life And such is the wastefulness of all your strife. Come away to learn something about nature And free yourself from urban drill and torture. There is so much left here for you to enjoy If only you put your city pride aside And in quiet, ask yourself the question why Why the city seems stripped of all forms of joy. Come away and eat the freshness of our grains; Drink from our salinity and get your cure. Our herbs possess a potency that is sure And our serenity to soothe your tired brain.
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Mar 17, 2020
Mar 17, 2020 at 9:58 AM UTC
The Colour of the Wind
Come away you savage city girls and boys. Come away to the natural countryside. What is it that makes you think you’re civilized? Your dry urban toil or white collar employ? That break your bones, waste your days and leave you pain? Come and feel the sleekness of nature’s valour Come and see the meekness of the wind’s colour You have around this place, but so much to gain. You boast of your club life how you drink and smoke But you know just how too often you go broke. You brag of the cars you drive but it’s funny How you’d take to fright on sighting a donkey. Your girls think they are as beautiful as they seem But come and behold a country girl after a swim No make-up, no sparkling ornaments or lace Just a soaked wrapper, dangling beads and her face. You consume too much obscene books and videos That you know nothing about your inbuilt radio. You dine with Satan everyday by your ways Though you never miss a service on church days. Such is the hypocrisy of city life And such is the wastefulness of all your strife. Come away to learn something about nature And free yourself from urban drill and torture. There is so much left here for you to enjoy If only you put your city pride aside And in quiet, ask yourself the question why Why the city seems stripped of all forms of joy. Come away and eat the freshness of our grains; Drink from our salinity and get your cure. Our herbs possess a potency that is sure And our serenity to soothe your tired brain.
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Let the hot sun go. Let the sweet breeze blow. Let the big sea grow As the rivers flow. And the oboist blow At dusk, his oboe. That darkness should grow. This day is once more sinking And the night is tired of waiting. The poor cower in grief. The rich cackling in relief. Night, no longer of blackness But of thick darkness In which courage is slaughtered Again and again. And fear has grown beards In the hearts of men. Let the hot sun go Let the sweet breeze blow Let the big sea grow As the rivers flow. And the oboist blow At dusk, his oboe That the night should show. The cruelty of our green god Shall be felt one morning at Ogoni. He will hit you on the brow, Whether you were guilty or not Until you are hung on a noose. t may be at dusk or dawn. It may be the verdict of a kangaroo court. But once it’s done, There will be only tears to show. Let the dark night go. Let that old **** crow. Let the morning flow. Let the tide go low As the rivers flow. That a day should grow With bright light to show. A fateful new day With dews fresh on the leaves. No one smelt death Until suddenly we heard him: “Come out here! You and your eight brothers Whose days I have numbered.” Hence their noose kissed the necks Of the victims. Victims of black gold. And the world was spitting fire And you groaned away in a deep sleep. What a noisy way to sleep!
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Mar 17, 2020
Mar 17, 2020 at 9:20 AM UTC
Dew Drops at Ogoni (In Memory of Ken Saro Wiwa and the Eight)
At the edge... Which is also the end You are haggard and tired So many flaws you wish to mend As you look at your back But all you have is reminiscence …You are to look but never to go back Your life is grinding to the verge… Your intuition is supposedly at its peak But your flesh has grown weak Your only weapon becomes your slow speech Your life line begins to crack …But you are only to look and never go back
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Mar 17, 2020
Mar 17, 2020 at 8:00 AM UTC
The Edge
Dream young man, dream It is not wrong. Dream of flashy desires; Classy women and high self-esteem. But burn your youthful fire With the fuel of your fresh valour. Dream young man, but not without labour Dream of the good, good things in life And follow up with great strives. But if after a while you do not get them Then it is your personal problem. It is funny to have fun All sort of fun under the moon and the sun But when you are done When your youth is gone Fun begins to sound no longer like fun. Run now young man, run Run after a trade or degree Now that your blood and thoughts can agree. But if you go on wasting your youthful bubbles Then you are in for great trouble. Lose your focus on earthly slavery And place it on celestial mastery. These canal craves Are but a drive to eternal grave. Look at the earth and heavens so divine Fear and marvel at the one Who put everything in line. There is great light when this is done But if you did not know this much Then you need some biblical touch. Wake up and get to work Now that the day is still young And your might equally as strong. Pick up your ***** and pitch fork. Begin unearth every precious stuff You dream so much of. Once the day begins to grow old Your might might find it hard to hold But if you choose to laze in your bed Then you are as good as dead.
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Mar 17, 2020
Mar 17, 2020 at 3:36 AM UTC
For Youths
Said the Robin to the Sparrow: ‘I really like to know Why those anxious fellow below Hurry and worry so.’ Replied the Sparrow to the Robin: ‘I want to believe that it must be They don’t have anyone within Such one who cares for you and me.’
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Mar 17, 2020
Mar 17, 2020 at 3:34 AM UTC
Anxiety
In Chibok, An IED finds it way Into the mind of a savage sect And made good use of the emptiness therein. In helplessness, Some school girls are bundled up From their school compound; Taken for a noisy ride into Sambisa; From where they will forget Their mothers’ voices. On the tube, There is a very loud lady Anathematising the “sharing” of blood In Borno. When she is done, The media is awash with the sound of ‘Na only you waka come?’ As if it is a joke To ****** young Nigerian girls From the four walls of their classroom Into the coldness of the wilderness To dwell amongst wild beasts. To learn new lessons; Weird lessons. In bed at night, My wife talks of Church bombings; Internally displaced persons; Slaughtering of citizens And the role of government in all of these And the security of our country And I pulled at the hairs From around her second mouth To make her change the topic And she falls for it and changes the topic. The white bearded Mallam On the rickety bus to Yola Fixes his eyes on me Like some foreigner And I feel the fire All through the trip And I burn and burn and burn Like the victims of Nyanya motor park blast It feels good though to know What it takes to Be burned into countless degrees. But after three weeks I am back to normal again I can feel again My senses are back again Working optimally And I can hear again As the presidential pit-bull And the black parrot The one that used to be In the fourth estate of the realm Begin to mete and dole out Slippery speeches, speeches you can’t hold That comes upon our ears To push out every substance From our heads Everything except this load of hopelessness This bitter bile in our mouth This unwanted fetus That no one would claim And then the hash tags; The media craze; The count down The women in red And the men that joined The bring back our girls The Michelle Obama The celebrities from across The noise, the sweat, the blood The ****** thighs of those girls Their torn underwear Their wails, their sobs, their pains To say the least The echo, the deafening echo And how we wave them all aside And look the other way. Like it did not happen at all Like it was just a movie Directed by a director That must be a sadist We sweep it under the carpet Like our other numerous National issues But I won’t write another story on betrayal I won’t write another poem On how a nation Could forsake her innocent children Instead I would write of a country Steeling, steeling, growing Growing resilient to emotion; Becoming many times dead To any feeling Tearing its tissues to pieces And building new ones That will be senseless Lifeless Bloodless. And the noise And the noise And the noise. In Chibok, An IED finds it way Into the mind of a savage sect And made good use of the emptiness therein. In helplessness, Some school girls are bundled up From their school compound; Taken for a noisy ride into Sambisa; From where they will forget Their mothers’ voices. On the tube, There is a very loud lady Anathematising the “sharing” of blood In Borno. When she is done, The media is awash with the sound of ‘Na only you waka come?’ As if it is a joke To ****** young Nigerian girls From the four walls of their classroom Into the coldness of the wilderness To dwell amongst wild beasts. To learn new lessons; Weird lessons. In bed at night, My wife talks of Church bombings; Internally displaced persons; Slaughtering of citizens And the role of government in all of these And the security of our country And I pulled at the hairs From around her second mouth To make her change the topic And she falls for it and changes the topic. The white bearded Mallam On the rickety bus to Yola Fixes his eyes on me Like some foreigner And I feel the fire All through the trip And I burn and burn and burn Like the victims of Nyanya motor park blast It feels good though to know What it takes to Be burned into countless degrees. But after three weeks I am back to normal again I can feel again My senses are back again Working optimally And I can hear again As the presidential pit-bull And the black parrot The one that used to be In the fourth estate of the realm Begin to mete and dole out Slippery speeches, speeches you can’t hold That comes upon our ears To push out every substance From our heads Everything except this load of hopelessness This bitter bile in our mouth This unwanted fetus That no one would claim And then the hash tags; The media craze; The count down The women in red And the men that joined The bring back our girls The Michelle Obama The celebrities from across The noise, the sweat, the blood The ****** thighs of those girls Their torn underwear Their wails, their sobs, their pains To say the least The echo, the deafening echo And how we wave them all aside And look the other way. Like it did not happen at all Like it was just a movie Directed by a director That must be a sadist We sweep it under the carpet Like our other numerous National issues But I won’t write another story on betrayal I won’t write another poem On how a nation Could forsake her innocent children Instead I would write of a country Steeling, steeling, growing Growing resilient to emotion; Becoming many times dead To any feeling Tearing its tissues to pieces And building new ones That will be senseless Lifeless Bloodless. And the noise And the noise And the noise. In Chibok, An IED finds it way Into the mind of a savage sect And made good use of the emptiness therein. In helplessness, Some school girls are bundled up From their school compound; Taken for a noisy ride into Sambisa; From where they will forget Their mothers’ voices. On the tube, There is a very loud lady Anathematising the “sharing” of blood In Borno. When she is done, The media is awash with the sound of ‘Na only you waka come?’ As if it is a joke To ****** young Nigerian girls From the four walls of their classroom Into the coldness of the wilderness To dwell amongst wild beasts. To learn new lessons; Weird lessons. In bed at night, My wife talks of Church bombings; Internally displaced persons; Slaughtering of citizens And the role of government in all of these And the security of our country And I pulled at the hairs From around her second mouth To make her change the topic And she falls for it and changes the topic. The white bearded Mallam On the rickety bus to Yola Fixes his eyes on me Like some foreigner And I feel the fire All through the trip And I burn and burn and burn Like the victims of Nyanya motor park blast It feels good though to know What it takes to Be burned into countless degrees. But after three weeks I am back to normal again I can feel again My senses are back again Working optimally And I can hear again As the presidential pit-bull And the black parrot The one that used to be In the fourth estate of the realm Begin to mete and dole out Slippery speeches, speeches you can’t hold That comes upon our ears To push out every substance From our heads Everything except this load of hopelessness This bitter bile in our mouth This unwanted fetus That no one would claim And then the hash tags; The media craze; The count down The women in red And the men that joined The bring back our girls The Michelle Obama The celebrities from across The noise, the sweat, the blood The ****** thighs of those girls Their torn underwear Their wails, their sobs, their pains To say the least The echo, the deafening echo And how we wave them all aside And look the other way. Like it did not happen at all Like it was just a movie Directed by a director That must be a sadist We sweep it under the carpet Like our other numerous National issues But I won’t write another story on betrayal I won’t write another poem On how a nation Could forsake her innocent children Instead I would write of a country Steeling, steeling, growing Growing resilient to emotion; Becoming many times dead To any feeling Tearing its tissues to pieces And building new ones That will be senseless Lifeless Bloodless. And the noise And the noise And the noise.
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Mar 16, 2020
Mar 16, 2020 at 3:41 AM UTC
Noise
In Chibok, An IED finds it way Into the mind of a savage sect And made good use of the emptiness therein. In helplessness, Some school girls are bundled up From their school compound; Taken for a noisy ride into Sambisa; From where they will forget Their mothers’ voices. On the tube, There is a very loud lady Anathematising the “sharing” of blood In Borno. When she is done, The media is awash with the sound of ‘Na only you waka come?’ As if it is a joke To ****** young Nigerian girls From the four walls of their classroom Into the coldness of the wilderness To dwell amongst wild beasts. To learn new lessons; Weird lessons. In bed at night, My wife talks of Church bombings; Internally displaced persons; Slaughtering of citizens And the role of government in all of these And the security of our country And I pulled at the hairs From around her second mouth To make her change the topic And she falls for it and changes the topic. The white bearded Mallam On the rickety bus to Yola Fixes his eyes on me Like some foreigner And I feel the fire All through the trip And I burn and burn and burn Like the victims of Nyanya motor park blast It feels good though to know What it takes to Be burned into countless degrees. But after three weeks I am back to normal again I can feel again My senses are back again Working optimally And I can hear again As the presidential pit-bull And the black parrot The one that used to be In the fourth estate of the realm Begin to mete and dole out Slippery speeches, speeches you can’t hold That comes upon our ears To push out every substance From our heads Everything except this load of hopelessness This bitter bile in our mouth This unwanted fetus That no one would claim And then the hash tags; The media craze; The count down The women in red And the men that joined The bring back our girls The Michelle Obama The celebrities from across The noise, the sweat, the blood The ****** thighs of those girls Their torn underwear Their wails, their sobs, their pains To say the least The echo, the deafening echo And how we wave them all aside And look the other way. Like it did not happen at all Like it was just a movie Directed by a director That must be a sadist We sweep it under the carpet Like our other numerous National issues But I won’t write another story on betrayal I won’t write another poem On how a nation Could forsake her innocent children Instead I would write of a country Steeling, steeling, growing Growing resilient to emotion; Becoming many times dead To any feeling Tearing its tissues to pieces And building new ones That will be senseless Lifeless Bloodless. And the noise And the noise And the noise. In Chibok, An IED finds it way Into the mind of a savage sect And made good use of the emptiness therein. In helplessness, Some school girls are bundled up From their school compound; Taken for a noisy ride into Sambisa; From where they will forget Their mothers’ voices. On the tube, There is a very loud lady Anathematising the “sharing” of blood In Borno. When she is done, The media is awash with the sound of ‘Na only you waka come?’ As if it is a joke To ****** young Nigerian girls From the four walls of their classroom Into the coldness of the wilderness To dwell amongst wild beasts. To learn new lessons; Weird lessons. In bed at night, My wife talks of Church bombings; Internally displaced persons; Slaughtering of citizens And the role of government in all of these And the security of our country And I pulled at the hairs From around her second mouth To make her change the topic And she falls for it and changes the topic. The white bearded Mallam On the rickety bus to Yola Fixes his eyes on me Like some foreigner And I feel the fire All through the trip And I burn and burn and burn Like the victims of Nyanya motor park blast It feels good though to know What it takes to Be burned into countless degrees. But after three weeks I am back to normal again I can feel again My senses are back again Working optimally And I can hear again As the presidential pit-bull And the black parrot The one that used to be In the fourth estate of the realm Begin to mete and dole out Slippery speeches, speeches you can’t hold That comes upon our ears To push out every substance From our heads Everything except this load of hopelessness This bitter bile in our mouth This unwanted fetus That no one would claim And then the hash tags; The media craze; The count down The women in red And the men that joined The bring back our girls The Michelle Obama The celebrities from across The noise, the sweat, the blood The ****** thighs of those girls Their torn underwear Their wails, their sobs, their pains To say the least The echo, the deafening echo And how we wave them all aside And look the other way. Like it did not happen at all Like it was just a movie Directed by a director That must be a sadist We sweep it under the carpet Like our other numerous National issues But I won’t write another story on betrayal I won’t write another poem On how a nation Could forsake her innocent children Instead I would write of a country Steeling, steeling, growing Growing resilient to emotion; Becoming many times dead To any feeling Tearing its tissues to pieces And building new ones That will be senseless Lifeless Bloodless. And the noise And the noise And the noise. In Chibok, An IED finds it way Into the mind of a savage sect And made good use of the emptiness therein. In helplessness, Some school girls are bundled up From their school compound; Taken for a noisy ride into Sambisa; From where they will forget Their mothers’ voices. On the tube, There is a very loud lady Anathematising the “sharing” of blood In Borno. When she is done, The media is awash with the sound of ‘Na only you waka come?’ As if it is a joke To ****** young Nigerian girls From the four walls of their classroom Into the coldness of the wilderness To dwell amongst wild beasts. To learn new lessons; Weird lessons. In bed at night, My wife talks of Church bombings; Internally displaced persons; Slaughtering of citizens And the role of government in all of these And the security of our country And I pulled at the hairs From around her second mouth To make her change the topic And she falls for it and changes the topic. The white bearded Mallam On the rickety bus to Yola Fixes his eyes on me Like some foreigner And I feel the fire All through the trip And I burn and burn and burn Like the victims of Nyanya motor park blast It feels good though to know What it takes to Be burned into countless degrees. But after three weeks I am back to normal again I can feel again My senses are back again Working optimally And I can hear again As the presidential pit-bull And the black parrot The one that used to be In the fourth estate of the realm Begin to mete and dole out Slippery speeches, speeches you can’t hold That comes upon our ears To push out every substance From our heads Everything except this load of hopelessness This bitter bile in our mouth This unwanted fetus That no one would claim And then the hash tags; The media craze; The count down The women in red And the men that joined The bring back our girls The Michelle Obama The celebrities from across The noise, the sweat, the blood The ****** thighs of those girls Their torn underwear Their wails, their sobs, their pains To say the least The echo, the deafening echo And how we wave them all aside And look the other way. Like it did not happen at all Like it was just a movie Directed by a director That must be a sadist We sweep it under the carpet Like our other numerous National issues But I won’t write another story on betrayal I won’t write another poem On how a nation Could forsake her innocent children Instead I would write of a country Steeling, steeling, growing Growing resilient to emotion; Becoming many times dead To any feeling Tearing its tissues to pieces And building new ones That will be senseless Lifeless Bloodless. And the noise And the noise And the noise.
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I am many things but confused I know myself in depth But somehow have I lose grip On issues that concern me And even though I so much want to, To take control, I really can’t have it. So for a start, you can call me helpless. I have been speechless for decades. I remember once at Ogoni When I thought I should speak up. How my tongue was hung on a noose Along with eight others. So, you can call me voiceless. I am a richly endowed woman With the ******* of a ****** maiden That is pointing to high heaven Like a cross breed of orange and papaya Attracting them from north, south, east and west. And when I say west, I mean West. So call me beautiful. They tumble on themselves To **** at my ******* To insert their huge long pipes Into my fountain to drill for sweet richness. They say my milky juice is rich. It is painful the way the gag; The way they drag and tear; Leaving me with scars all over. So in pity, you can call me mutilated. The hairs of my head And my beards beneath and below Are thick and bloomy Like the rain forests and mangrove swamps Cross crossing the coasts and inlands Of the deltas of the Niger River So call me fertile, fruitful or rich. My daughters are sharp and beautiful like Grace Alele Williams and Agbani Darego; My sons are intellectual giants and warriors like The John Pepper Clarkes and the Tompolos They cut across in greatness at every endeavor like Blessing Okagbare, Clement Isong, Louis Edet… So please call me proud and blessed. My fountain flows endlessly In spite of my turmoil, with thick black gold Which smells rich and sweet. So call me verdure, elegant or evergreen. Nobody cares for me They delight in ****** me: These oil companies And my conniving governments. They leave me wounded all over Without treatment or care. So call me degraded or exploited. My only hope for freedom someday Comes from the loud sounding canons Fired by my aggrieved children Every now and then. So you can call me a dreamer. When one day freedom eventually comes, Then you can call me emancipated.
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Mar 16, 2020
Mar 16, 2020 at 3:38 AM UTC
Call Me What You May
I am many things but confused I know myself in depth But somehow have I lose grip On issues that concern me And even though I so much want to, To take control, I really can’t have it. So for a start, you can call me helpless. I have been speechless for decades. I remember once at Ogoni When I thought I should speak up. How my tongue was hung on a noose Along with eight others. So, you can call me voiceless. I am a richly endowed woman With the ******* of a ****** maiden That is pointing to high heaven Like a cross breed of orange and papaya Attracting them from north, south, east and west. And when I say west, I mean West. So call me beautiful. They tumble on themselves To **** at my ******* To insert their huge long pipes Into my fountain to drill for sweet richness. They say my milky juice is rich. It is painful the way the gag; The way they drag and tear; Leaving me with scars all over. So in pity, you can call me mutilated. The hairs of my head And my beards beneath and below Are thick and bloomy Like the rain forests and mangrove swamps Cross crossing the coasts and inlands Of the deltas of the Niger River So call me fertile, fruitful or rich. My daughters are sharp and beautiful like Grace Alele Williams and Agbani Darego; My sons are intellectual giants and warriors like The John Pepper Clarkes and the Tompolos They cut across in greatness at every endeavor like Blessing Okagbare, Clement Isong, Louis Edet… So please call me proud and blessed. My fountain flows endlessly In spite of my turmoil, with thick black gold Which smells rich and sweet. So call me verdure, elegant or evergreen. Nobody cares for me They delight in ****** me: These oil companies And my conniving governments. They leave me wounded all over Without treatment or care. So call me degraded or exploited. My only hope for freedom someday Comes from the loud sounding canons Fired by my aggrieved children Every now and then. So you can call me a dreamer. When one day freedom eventually comes, Then you can call me emancipated.
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