Translate

Sunday, 17 April 2016

Poetry: Arewa by Kolade Olanrewaju Freedom


Photo Credit: Subomi Cole
Makeup: BeautySplashAfrica

Arewa,
your beauty is a blade cutting deep into
the fleshiness of my muse, to draw blood
plastering crispy papers with fine layers of
words refined in the industry of infatuation.


Photo Credit: Subomi Cole
Makeup: BeautySplashAfrica

Arewa,
your beauty is that of the departing sun
radiating its elegance through waters
basking in the calmness of the young night
unworried by alarming approach of darkness.


Photo Credit: S.Cole/Qudrah
Makeup: BeautySplashAfrica

Arewa,
your beauty is a poet versifying moments spent
under the shade of a tree, under endless canopies
of skies deserted by stars because you were
the star for the night – the supreme beauty.

Saturday, 16 April 2016

Apata to Dugbe: Of Misfortune and Fortune by Bamidele Seth


I boarded a bus from Apata to Dugbe, dropping my box in its boot. While doing that, a similar box which insignificantly differed in size from mine caught my attention. I had premonitions, but I discarded them, taking the tattered seat in front like royalty.
   
Along the way, a fellow passenger alerted the driver he would alight at the next bus stop, making it known he had luggage in the boot. On alighting, the bus conductor hastily opened the boot and ignorantly gave my box to the man who innocently took it. He immediately flagged down a taxi cruising towards Ojoo/UI.  My instincts drove cold through my spines propelling me to look back to confirm from the conductor if my box was still 'rightly safe' in the boot. He replied assertively in Yoruba. With the intonation of the Ibadan man which his long bold tribal marks also depicted him to be, he said, "Busi yin wa nbe, emi ni mo sa gbee be" meaning the box was safe. Unknown to him, he had made a costly mistake. I turned to sit well, trying to trust the credibility of the conductor while anxiety kept smiling at me mockingly. On getting to my destination, I hopped off the bus, took a stride towards the back of the bus to get my box which the bus conductor already offloaded before I could reach the rear. Dropping the hat, before I could grab it to ascertain its ownership, the bus had zoomed off.

Monday, 21 March 2016

Toluwalase by Olayinka Abimbola Egbokhare





Five out of nine months
You lived out your fear
A little prayer
A lot more worry
Then the first locking of our eyes...
You checked briskly
Ten fingers and toes, one nose...
Ahh, your loud muted sigh
Then you saw the funny shaped finger.
But you loved still
Loved till your heart almost burst
Loved, ignoring the reports of the sour faced clan in white coats
You shut off the tearlets
Then Baba came
Eyes bloodshot but not from wine
My Baba, the Baba of the other two musketeers who just found a new love
And he pronounced my name
No need to wait for eight days "Toluwalase",
Let God have the final say...

Sunday, 20 March 2016

Special Feature: Kukogho Iruesiri Samson, Author of 'I SAID THESE WORDS' and Founder of WRR


SHE IS NOT PERFECT

She is not perfect
But her eyes stole the colours of rainbow
They light up my skies on happy days
Parabolic beauty beyond compare

She is not perfect
But the melody of her voice
Calms the taut nerves of my heart
And sings my soul to sleep 

She is not perfect
But her lips are softer than butter
And firm is the roundness
Of the swells on her chest 

She is not perfect
So when I frown my face
As she walks by, do not smile
She'll soon be in my arms 

She is not perfect
But our hearts are one
The osmosis of love
Made it so 

Saturday, 19 March 2016

WORDS ARE LIKE CLAY by Professor Francis Egbokhare

If you are a linguist like I am, chances are that you have come to appreciate the value of words. Politicians with savvy know too well that politics is about weaving words like a spider and getting all others but oneself caught in the web. Words evoke emotions; they help us to think clearly. The power or words lie in the fact that they are the most potent instrument for control. Man has not been able to invent a better means. Words never fail, they cannot fail if we know how to string them together, if we apply them with the right dose of passion and if we learn how to pamper them and tease out the juice in them.



Words can also be terrible if we fail to understand them. For instance, it is a taboo to break words because they are like eggs, you cannot put them back together. You don’t also throw them at others because they can harden on contact with the hearts or men and become missiles thrown back at you. The greatest thing about words is that they are poor servants sometimes, they can tell stories which we do not intend. They reveal the secrets of our hearts in such remote and dark places which even God may not have been to. I am more fascinated at how words tell stories about our lives and our society. For instance, a poor man gets killed, a rich man or person of substance is murdered, a politician or ruler is assassinated. 

Friday, 18 March 2016

International Feature: FERN G. Z. CARR, Member of the League of Canadian Poets and Pushcart Prize Nominee



Art and a Winter Landscape

Shadows stretch their arms
and yawn
as they lie upon a bed rumpled
by trails of footprints
disappearing into the distance
like a perspective drawing
of converging railway tracks.
Blanketed with snow-laden pines,
mountains watch the shadows sleep
under a ceiling of cirrus cloud –
their contours sketched upon a vast canvas.
Blue – everything is swathed in shades of blue:
smoke curling up from chimneys,
sky, snow-capped mountains, ice on the lake –
reflections of Picasso’s Blue Period;
the light – crisp, sharp and focused –
a tribute to nature’s artistry
as she paints a winter landscape.


Wednesday, 9 March 2016

Special Feature: Eriata Oribhabor, Nigeria's Foremost Poet and Poetry Promoter

For YOU

Eriata Oribhabor in poetic motion...

That very place and time came
Without a click, rolling back the
Innocence of your sincerity
Enveloping me till date.

The gate opened you onto the road
For a meeting of two; a brother
And a sister...careless about
Colour, creed and more.

That day, that moment, that meet
That click of life's beauty
Beauty...from the inside
Never weather beaten.

Turn back the hand
Of your thoughts...tell me
Its clicking sounds...a deep breath
Tell me we are not brother and sister.

These lines are for you...yes...for you
Who read them long before written
In bold letters on that cake you baked me
When I hardly knew how cakes taste.

Friday, 4 March 2016

Rebirth of Hope by Prosperline Amadi

The sky, a sizeable womb, foggy
And deformed with pregnant clouds.
The grounds sun-baked, utterly dry
With vein-like cracks running through.
The plains grossly athirst.

No birds heard chirping, singing
The playground devoid of plays
All trees stood bare, abandoned
Exposed to the caress of the wind.

Beneath the land a seed lay...
Dormant, repellent but potent.
In its confines, rebirth echoed
For freedom to eavesdrop.

Casualties of Depravities by Professor Francis Egbokhare

We are the casualties
Prisoners in a fortress of falling walls
Grandmasters of the illusion of excellence
Masked men and women in ‘Grand Theft Identity’1
Residents of a disappearing tower
Actors on a sinking sewer
Stars of a game of ruse

Yes!
We are the robed ones
Dressed up in scarlet regalia of monumental errors
Collocated in academic processions like humanized penguins
None breaking formation
All intuiting affirmation
Echoing the dol-drum

We are sycophants
Wallowing in error
In the name of hunger
We shall plunder2

Monday, 29 February 2016

Flash Fiction: A New Page by Yetunde Oyelude

You are only allowed to study eminent science courses as a child of Professor Adebanjo, and as fate would have it, I am an ‘Adebanjo’; and I dare not trash the tradition.

It is evening and my family members are in the living room spending quality time with one another, but I chose to confine myself to my room, so I could dwell on what I wanted to do with my life. And so I started thinking; Abigael, you are the most intelligent senior student in the science class of the prestigious Great Learners High School with several accolades backing this fact, and most importantly, you have made your doting father the proudest man on earth. And here you are, about to graduate high school with the saddest heart. Why is that?

“Daddy, I want to be a writer.” Those words didn’t seem like they came from my mouth. I blinked my eyes severally like someone who was just getting out of hypnosis. I didn’t understand how I got to the living room; all I knew was that I had just said the abominable.

Flash Fiction: A Killer Bite by Tomiwa Adeosun

A strong offensive odour hit Mr. Adeleke's nostrils as he opened the front door of his house.

"Ah-ah, what kind of smell is this?" He asked himself aloud. Then he slowly traced the smell to the bathroom and as he opened the door, the strongest of the odour that had been locked away enveloped him, forcing him to shut his nostrils. With shaky hands, he lifted the lid of the water closet and discovered that it was full of faeces.

“Where could Segun have gone, to have left the toilet in such disgusting state?” Mr. Adeleke wondered as he left the bathroom to get some drinking water.

On getting to the kitchen, he was shocked to meet the pile of plates that had been there when he was leaving for work in the morning. "What! Even the plates are unwashed. I will beat this boy to coma today,” Mr. Adeleke fumed as he proceeded to the backyard to cut off some branches of the guava tree, to be processed into buttocks-smacking tools.

Friday, 26 February 2016

Poetry: Abimbola by Emebiriodo Ugochukwu


 
Abimbola
 Can you keep a secret?
How long can you keep it?
Can you not tell her
That while she slept
I took out time to stare at God's perfect masterpiece?
Her!

Can you not tell her
That she is my Muse
And her absence here
Has rendered my quill useless?
Can you not tell her
That for pride's sake
I act as if I don't know her favourite colour,
Her favourite food,
Her favourite author,
And her favourite books?

Can you not tell her
That I sometimes see how she stares from across the room
When we are seated apart
How her stares burn when she sees me flirting with other
girls?
Can you not tell her
That I know
That she quietly hopes I break up with ‘bae’
With those "expert" relationship tips she gives?

Can you not tell her
That her voice is terrible
When she sings,
And that smile on my face
Was birthed from pain in my eardrums?

Flash Fiction: My Silver Lining by Aladesuyi Seun

Trouble loomed. I just used the last ₦100 in my purse to get to my uncle’s office. I wouldn’t have acted so irrationally if he had not assured me of being employed immediately.

I stared at the secretary, who was totally oblivious to my situation, and asked, “sir, are you sure he won’t come back to office today because he told me to come exactly this time, today.”
The secretary looked at me disdainfully, making me feel as if my brain was unclad.

 “Least you can do is answer,” I muttered.

Stranded and frustrated, I tugged at the hem of my chiffon blouse, trying to figure out how to get home with zero naira in my purse. I had hoped my uncle would give me money to take cab back home.

Well, if there was anything, like a silver lining, it was not my fate; apparently, my life was full of dark clouds. I slowly made for the exit planning to walk all the miles home.

 “Miss Fiona Alade...!”

 I turned to see the secretary hurriedly making his way towards me with a brown envelope visible in his hand. I gave him a questioning look.

Thursday, 25 February 2016

Smiling Again by Olayinka Egbokhare

I have learnt to smile again,
Learnt to play and to love and to receive love.
Learnt that one can work at showing love to others,
Learnt that love has eyes and dance and laughter
Love has sober, trying moments.
Love can mean sharing or giving or taking.
Love can come at unexpected times and from unlikely quarters.
Love can take flights of risk and be daring.
Love can put illness and loss aside and shine through,
Love can argue and disagree but will refuse to fight or bear grudges.
Love may be hidden because it is too premature to declare.
Love can hurt others who love us because it does not command their approval.
Love can peep or come forth in boldness.
Love will not leave you poor but richer all ways round.
Love can teach you life lessons that will make you strong.
Love will always prevail over the storms of life.



Biography

Olayinka Abimbola Egbokhare was born in Ibadan, Oyo State. Her love for writing was brought to the fore by Mrs Ubah, one of her English teachers at the Federal Government Girls College, New-Bussa, Niger State. Yinka, the author of the widely acclaimed novel - 'Dazzling Mirage', holds a Ph.D in Communication and Language Arts, University of Ibadan where she teaches writing skills, advertising message development amongst other courses.

She makes her home in Ibadan with her husband, Francis and their children.

Wednesday, 24 February 2016

Poetry: Be at Ease, Mother


Your tears, like rainfall, wet the grounds
of sorrow within the region of regrets,
growing weeds of sadness on farmlands
fertilized by agonies of motherhood.
Mother, cry out your heart no more;
my future, like a mop, shall wipe away
dustiness of the past. Be at ease, mother.
-          Kolade Olanrewaju Freedom

That spherical earth; a part of you –  
covert, protruding, elapsing stipulated time.
The purge came with a pain, which you bore.
Nocturnal you became; your siesta sparse.
These tears, you'll once more shed; the cause,
I'll once again be, but for joy.
-          Makinde Damilola

For years, I kept sleep away from the tent of your eyes –
your pupils dilated in vain as my desires rushed at you like a flood.
Heart as solid as the rock, refusing to crumble under the pressure
solely borne. Yet your smile, as bright as the sun, keeps my feet
fired for a long walk. My accomplishments will be inspired by the zeal
to repay you for all the sacrifices. This promise,
a sacred covenant, shall be kept to honor motherhood.
-          Aladesuyi Seun