One virtuous man of the cloth, who sees some
of his peers jaunting downtown with a raised skirt, has chided them to put
their skirt down, walk with cultivated control, and stop struggling for
sovereignty with God. I like him. See the report here.
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Monday, February 13, 2012
Delivery Boy
Go embalm your still-born face in a cadaver fridge. When I showered you with a healthy tip, your fetid face fluoresced to life. I spoilt you just to prove to you that you are a slave.
Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone
Saturday, February 11, 2012
Street Sweeping in the Harmattan
I’d only assayed the third layer of dust cemented
on their skins when the traffic lay on me. As we moved on, we huffed extra soot
to thicken the puff swirling around them. Their eyes did not look down. They looked
bright and straight ahead, maybe a little irritated. They still had to take
their brooms out there in the hard-nosed Harmattan.
Friday, February 10, 2012
Bleak Benighted Bonehead
We suffer all styles and stripes in our
universities: the unlettered, the unread, the untutored, the vacuous. But what benighted
bonehead would bob and bounce at a UG admission letter to the Bachelor of
Political Science degree in the second semester? I hope find you a place in
that uni.
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Anger Waiting for a Cause in the City of Accra
Two young men snatched a phone in broad
daylight and bolted. One slipped away; the other was bagged by oh ten thousand ‘petulants’.
They hurt and hammered the hangdog with sticks and stones and switches until
their gall seemed to peter out. Then, a jobless Beelzebub fetched a grubby jerrycan
of grimy engine oil. They soused him slick with the stuff, and made him glug a gallon or two.
Friday, February 3, 2012
Smiling Monsters after Dark in the City of Accra
Man Mountain, hanging like a treacherous cliff
over a forlorn length of the shadowy Spintex Road in the mini-principled city
of Accra, why are you counting on a lift from strangers with that tarzan torso just because you can smile?
Thursday, February 2, 2012
The Village Fool Lives Long
Years ago, while crawling back to this smothering
city from a country cruise, my team mates and I gained on a hamlet as the day
lit out. The family was back from breaking rocks, bones, pods, grounds or whatever
hard work they did. The evening feast had been finger-licked. Father and
mothers, siblings, dogs, cats and birds huddled together in a close circle to
ululate an uncouth song. The father fooled, frolicked and tripped the light
fantastic in the middle. The women and children egged him on. Stress almost kayoed
me today at work, and I remembered that simple, solid scene.
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