When Mary lost her virginity,
Jesus’ cry woke the night
And sleep fled the night’s eyes.
The Magi followed stars that
Suffered silence as
Gifts rocked the manger of the babe—Jesus.
Gifts rocked the manger of the babe—Jesus.
From then till now, nights in Kingston
Are like days that defy meditations—
To feel the void and calmness that keep the night.
Yet, night is awake as the day.
But, who would blame the night?
Does it own itself?
Its owner is God who came as man
And killed its sleep before mortals—
God is both night and day—and I, a peripatetic poet whose
Solitude is lost to night’s mystery of wakefulness.
This night that knows no sleep,
Is yours the sleep that makes death an eternal journey?
This night that knows no sleep,
Is yours the sleep that soothes a fetus?
This night that knows no sleep,
Is your spit in the bite of tsetse flies?
This night that knows no sleep,
Is your sleep the song that scents the throne of God?
There’s no night in London and The City of Light—
As both night and its sleep are in God’s briefcase.
© Echezonachukwu Nduka 2014
Image: Echezonachukwu Nduka
Photo Credit : Michael Yipake Bansey