There is music in the soul of a travelling man,
there is hope in the fish struggling on a hook,
and one year later, the sky is still blue,
the clouds are still ordered according to the breath
of a celestial being, but if you look closely
they divide like the chaos of a battlefield.
The road, choked with cars, resembles
from above two bloated snakes on water
and here, as in all cities, you could purchase death
if you know where to look.
I have been away from home,
I have become one of those annoying emigrants
who return to dirty December, finding our way
to parties, singing the goodness of newly found wealth
fashioned from the wild darkness of winter,
from the loneliness of apartment buildings.
Outside, the smell of this city greets me.
For here, we no dey fear anybody, says the driver.
I have nothing to fear,
although out of water the slum of Makoko rises,
and between the houses on stilts, children paddle
canoes to school while photographers are busy at work,
capturing for European galleries
this place they had christened the poor Venice of Africa.
The evening sun shepherds the sky, passengers in danfos
argue about politics, Big Brother, the life
of some celebrity. It is beautiful here, this place
with all its sorrow. I tremble. I do not know
how to hate this country, I do not know
how to run away from the joy and frustration
of every season.
And still, the world moves on,
and still, a woman stands beside my window,
offering me plantain chips, brother,
buy this one, I promise you, e sweet like paradise.