Tuesday 11 June 2013

The Song of the Pick

A wave of strong African men
Prisoners exploding with colour and song
Their picks raised harmoniously
Their ankles shackled

Prisoners exploding with color and song
Their rage and longing in lyrics
the withering warden dismisses
as the pleasant nothings of natives at work

Their picks raised harmoniously
high above the hatted head of their emaciated oppressor 
Oblivious to their power 
over him, the earth and the shackles


Their ankles shackled
The earth bleeds in anticipation
For the picks to strike down hard
For the picks to sing their song 






I've only just discovered Gerard Sekoto.
Tragic that artists and important South Africans like him were kept from my school textbooks at the time. I think I'm still recovering from a pretty damaging education system. These paintings are incredible!

Thursday 6 June 2013

Energy



Father Boyce said energy never dies
Although scientists, he said
were observing some in the Russian depths of Lake Baikal
that looked to be on its last legs
Father Boyce said it hadn’t died yet though
and he didn’t think it would

So energy never dies said the priest
and he chalked an equation on the board
to put his point beyond the arguments of catholic schoolchildren
and budding unbelievers
So neither will you or I or anyone
God takes us home
God takes us home

On my scooter route to work knocked dead
some weeks back snarled a rotting dog
In death it had begun to disappear
I thought of energy and Father Boyce who must be gone by now
Red and white mushrooms popped up beside the dog
Cheerfully alive in contrast to the putrid carcass

Look Father! I screamed into my crash helmet
Angels!
Angels!