I
feel a poem
Thumping deep, deep
I feel a poem inside
wriggling within the membrane
of my soul;
tiny fists beating,
beating against my being
trying to break the navel cord,
crying, crying out
to be born on paper
Thumping
deep, so deeply
I feel a poem,
inside
The poet must die
For James Matthews and Gladys Thomas after their
poems were executed
The poet must die
her murmuring threatens their survival
her breath could start the revolution;
she must be destroyed
Ban her
Send her to the Island
Call the firing-squad
But remember to wipe her blood
From the wall,
Then destroy the wall
Crush the house
Kill the neighbours
If their lies are to survive
The poet must die
Sobukwe
On his death
It was our suffering
and our tears
that nourished and kept him alive
their law that killed him
Let no dirges be sung
no shrines be raised
to burden his memory
sages such as he
need no tombstones
to speak their fame
Lay him down on a high mountain
that he may look
on the land he loved
the nation for which he died
Men feared the fire of his soul
Zimbabwean love song
Sing and dance
Sons, daughters of Zimbabwe
It is the call of a timeless glory
And the beat of the native song
That beckoned you to struggle on
Nana Zimbabwe
It was your dance of daring feet
Which set the bush ablaze,
Made the dying sweet
Sing and dance
Daughters and sons of Zimbabwe
It is the rooster that sings of children
Marching against the wind
The white night is dead
Freedom walks in the sunrise
And in the glow of an eternal love song
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