I
From Grandpa,
I learnt to give water to
Thirsty hopes;
These words are for the bruised soul
Whose dreams are strangled in the wind,
Astray in an aging petal.
II
Mother showed me how to paint colours on wrinkled flowers
And I arrived to the silence of senile autumn
Harvesting lost vigour and life
The vigour of our iron bodies that became food
For children like me,
Or chaff mixed with prophecies of our forefathers,
To use in making bright colours
For the souls that had forgotten
What it means to breathe.
III
From the mountain of Grandpa’s memories,
I steal aborted songs that were never sung
Planted them in the throats of withered souls,
Watering them with the taste of living…
I watched them grow into
A nation with the anthem we fed our tongues
So that our voices may learn to sing.
IV
For this nation wears the colour of souls that taught us to live;
The children of this nation fulfil the prophecies of old
Florae painted in the bouquet of spring
Because grandpa taught us to paint colours,
On the petals of our wrinkled flowers.
Read – I am Power – A Poem by Olatunji Zion, Nigeria
Lost in the quiet beauty of these colours. Amazing…