SONG OF A BROKEN LANGUAGE
Black History Month Contest Runner-Up
Arikewusola Abdul Awal
Saki, Nigeria
Saki Parapo Community Grammar School
Poetry
SONG OF A BROKEN LANGUAGE
Snake sloughs. An owl hoots:
My life is creeping into oblivion.
A boy runs into me and shrieks—
His father warns him I’m a plague.
His mother says, “don’t stretch Yorùbá
On your tongue, it is not worth your taste.”
This boy spells me as grunge. I enter
His mouth & he lacerates his tongue
Until it atones for its slip with bruised water.
Call this boy a snail that deserts its shell
& crawls into the blue skin of the Pacific.
Will a snail in the water become a fish?
Call the shell a museum of wits. Say,
Ọmọ tó sọ'lé nù, ó so àpò ìyà kọ́.
Meaning a snail that jettisons its shell
Drags itself to the satchel of death.
This boy chameleons his tongue until
It shape-shifts into an abyss of colours,
Of languages. He casts me into oblivion.
Tell this boy he may deny me
With the subtleness of his tongue, & he
May slough his skin with strange lotion, but
The spring of the blood running in his vein,
Alas, he can’t afford to deny.
EDITORIAL PRAISE
I was mesmerized by [this] poem's musical narration [woven] with its haunting vividness of imageries… I truly admire how [the author] brilliantly [knits] a fabric of nuanced-like body of practice and belief of the Black experience from the perspective of multilingualism.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Arikewusola Abdul Awal is a young poet from Nigeria. His high school is Saki Parapo Community Grammar school, Oyo state. He has his works published on Brittle Paper, Afritondo, Kalahari Review, and elsewhere. He enjoys looking at the full moon.