Tuesday 27 July 2021

Four Poems by Cornelia Smith Fick

 



GOD MYTHOLOGY CREED


new sins, old ones derived

from bankrupt mores.

Tenets to prop up

atom by atom,

a new religion

banded, nailed

to the coffin of dignity–

a new dark age ascending

ruled by gods of war

lemming-like prying off the poor

rising glory of evil

the broad path

peopled by silent dissenters

with back-packs,

peering at their feet

marshalling them against

toddling off the road

laid down by power.

 

Published in Fractured Poetics, CA: Social Design, Inc. 2018



HOTEL FIRE  

The Hotel hangs in the sky; it has lost its foundations. Should it be lowered it will skid off the sea sand choking the growth of plants, flowers and trees. The windows are blackened. The doors are red, the shape of hearts.

The roof like ebony graves. 

They came to the Hotel for rest, a vacation. The Hotel opened its door and welcomed the tired stranger.

The hungry. 

They connected in the sitting room, moved to the dining room. The table was laid out, damask table cloth, glasses, cutlery. They brought their own chairs, custom-made with carvings of their desires. One sat on pineapples he craved, another on diamonds, still another on gold. 

Tall buildings grew around the Hotel. Most of them were empty. The people who’d lived there had disappeared into the ruins. 

The barren landscape advertised for people to live there, to remove the sea sand, to scratch for fertile soil and plant trees and flowers. There was also a need for hangers, because every hotel needs hangers for clothes. Clothes meant travelling from this continent to that, in ships. Clothes meant belonging, identity, a scarf a meeting place for those who were like-minded. 

They wanted to fix the Hotel; its doors had fallen off. Its heat had disappeared. Who would be the receptionist? The Devil. God. Whoever won the fight to create wealth and taller buildings, taller people, taller poetry and discourse.

This Hotel had been sold to who you ask. 

The light in the passage is from the Hotel. The rest is dark, like you can imagine. Dark, like skins. The hotel serves bodies on plates, silver plates carried by taller than buildings. Men. Who sneak in the corridor, sliding on their shoes, breathing fire. 

The hotel is in darkness, just the light under the door. Eskom load shedding. What is in the lighted room? No one knows. We are afraid to find out; there is comfort in darkness, the contours of familiar furniture holding you, keeping you warm. What if we let go of the darkness to explore the light? Where would it lead? 

Most of us want the familiar, from morning to night, from the cradle to the grave. Darkness in the womb. Darkness in the grave. Nothing to interfere with a settled lifestyle, settled ideas, settled norms.

Suffocating familiar lines of knowing, of dreaming. 

A fire that is not of your making, but exists. You don’t need to check if it has wood and coal, a good fire starter. It can burn from stars, the universe.

(Eskom, loadshedding: an electricity company, a blackout)




SOMEONE IS WEARING MY CLOTHES 


In lockdown

A new dress faded like memory

A blouse blooms a scorched rose

A jacket stained like rust

Slippers soiled

Nobody here but us

A mystery

Jewellery broken in its box

Like my faith



THE WIND

 

Small humiliations

of day to day life,

each a stone, Heitsi Eibib,

piled into a mountain

to revere, obstructing our view.

Each stone stacked up, Heitsi Eibib,

a stone of greeting on every grave,

a mountain.

 

Standing to stand up, sometimes not,

a woundedness in our family,

from great pain comes great evil

truth uncomfortable

its brightness can blind you  ̶  if you want;

much better to take a stick

and tap in the darkness.

 

A fire wind

burnt blackness

not being able to see

a national blindness.

Don’t wake the sleeping titan

of wounds collected

lest it rears up

and incinerates everything in its path.

 


Cornelia Smith Fick was longlisted for the Sol Plaatje EU Poetry Award (2016), the erbacce award (2021) and highly commended in The Sentinel Literary Quarterly Poetry Competition (2020). Her debut collection Eye of a Needle: And Other stories, was published in 2017. Her stories and poems are in EXPERIMENTAL WRITING: Volume 1, Africa VS Latin America; Fractured poetics: a poetry anthology; Soho Square V, Bloomsbury; To breathe into another voice, a poetry/jazz anthology; Ladyboxbooks; Poetry Potion; Spelk; New Contrast and Atlanta Review among others. She is currently a PhD candidate at University of the Western Cape.







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