Empty by Hussain Ahmed
I know what a body emptied
of its light, feels like on the palms.
I have seen a body emptied of
its memory, I dread the open eyes,
even though I don’t dream of them –
I dread what is dead that is not a sacrifice.
I avoid eyes emptied of light, I fear
they would tell me something new about myself
if our eyes meet. I am scared they would
tell me what no one would believe.
I am not bold enough to be a mad prophet.
Today, I locked eyes with a small body,
emptied of want. The toddler was younger
than the one I held to the cemetery in these hands
because we don’t have gurney for children.
I dream of bodies cloaked for prayers,
laid on the grey rug inside my room.
I’m waiting for my brothers to join me
as we always do, but they are seven seas away
& this prayer must be said before the sun set.
Because the moon is God’s right eye,
we don’t bury our dead under its light, even in war.
I was alone, but I hear my lover’s voice
asking me to switch off the fan.
With eyes eclipsed with fatigue, I raised my hands
and brought the blades to a halt
after watching the clips of children
dressed as if they were on a journey in Sahara,
except their mothers are assembled
in a garden of wren, learning to perfume their palms
with what is left of the dead. I made ablution
and stood on the danduma – spread before I slept off,
the sun slouched in its cradle, it’s past time for prayer.
Hussain Ahmed is a Nigerian poet and environmentalist. He is the 2022 winner of the Orison book prize, the author of Soliloquy with the Ghosts in Nile (Black Ocean Press) and currently a PhD student at the University of Cincinnati.
17 April 2023
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