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All works copyrighted and may not be reproduced without permission. ©2013 - hoc anno | www.artsetcbarbados.com
All works copyrighted and may not be reproduced without permission. ©2013 - hoc anno | www.artsetcbarbados.com
As thirst discourses best on water,
and night is the expert on day,
so is the slave an authority on freedom.
The deepest questions
about evil, oppression and betrayal
are written on the wales on his back.
He is like a Jonah
in the belly of the seas of history.
His cane-piece is an academy
for meditations
on labour
For the benefit of his own body;
and on work
for equality, democracy and prosperity.
Yet if he learns to read
they will chop off his hand.
But he knows
that neither parliament nor throne
can bind
the liberty of his philosophizing mind.
St Hope Earl McKenzie taught Philosophy at the University of the West Indies, Mona. His books include Philosophy in the West Indian Novel (2009), Against Linearity (1992) and A Bluebird Named Poetry: Linked Poems, Stories and Paintings (2012). In 2000, he was awarded a Silver Musgrave Medal by the Institute of Jamaica for his contribution to Literature. This poem is from The Loneliness of a Caribbean Philosopher and Other Essays (2013).