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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
The True, True Mudda Sally. Illustration Copyright © 2023 by Akaila Armstrong.
Love in the Time of Circular Chants
Chant A Psalm A Day… Chant A Psalm A Day…
Chant A Psalm A Day…
An undulating Steel Pulse hosanna
That’s how a Chewa man—
his ebony courting hands, soft-pressing
vinyl onto record player, evoked
a bell and bass reggae of rejoicing
A Chewa man with his budding locks
and Bantu eyes, unwitting of
church bells, Caribbean island steeples
bristle-broom sweeping the backyard
close to de donkey pen, gently
past de pigeon coop where
an old old great woman, strong
with garlic in her bosom, stood
flinging chants of get behind me Satan
at bygone plantation overseers—
That’s how a Chewa man
with the spin of a single record, charmed
a bursting young woman’s dead grandmother
into inter-visiting, into whispering into her ear:
Marry him, I want to be his in-law.
In Conversation with Mudda Sally
Let me charm you with my backside
gorgeous rise of stretch marks, formed
as I rushed into puberty and beyond
See how my pink coral shells couple
with cowrie, curving in to cup me
watch them jiggle with my smile
Notice my belly, smooth. Twice
cocooned babies in pure cocoa butter
full of child and no darkened prize lines
Don’t hold that against me. Front stria
the proud-new-mole-on-her-right-cheek
beauty mark—that’s not for me
my splendour lives where I sway
Mudda-curved to guide or mamaguy
Shedding the Vernacular
neck shackles and whips
that’s why Umbundu dimmed crossing the seas
why you is wunna
how Twi hid in Caribbean cane fields
then crossed to birth Geechee amongst blows of cotton fields
how gwine and gine and gurl guh long
sashayed into wid cho bad self
how we jived back across the ocean to
hold hands with Amandla! Awethu!
spirits unbowed shedding the vernacular
Lynda V. E. Crawford is a poet born and raised in Barbados. She lives in the US. Both homes sway her writing. Her work is in publications including The Caribbean Writer, The Galway Review, The Bookends Review, Moonstone Arts Center anthologies (various), and Exposition Review. Lynda is a 2022 Pushcart Prize and Nina Riggs Poetry Award nominee.