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ENGLISH 2A: SOUTH AFRICAN POETRY
FROM PROTESTTOPOST-APARTHEID
Date Topic Required Reading
Monday
22 April
TheBlack
Consciousness Movement
and Protest Poetry
 “What‟s in this Black „Shit‟” (Serote)
 “My Brothers in the Streets” (Serote)
Friday
26 April
The Black
Consciousness Movement
and Protest Poetry
 “The Birth of Shaka” (Mtshali)
 “The Watchman‟s Blues” (Mtshali)
Monday
29 April
Poetry of
the Transition
 “Ummi” (Afrika)
 “Power Cut” (Afrika)
Friday 3
May
Revisionist Poetry  “Our Sharpeville” (De Kok)
Monday
6 May
The Truth and
Reconciliation Commission
 “For all Voices, For all Victims” (Krog)
Friday
10 May
Recent Poems  “This is what I‟ll remember” (Baderoon)
 “Old photographs” (Baderoon)
2
What’s in this Black ‘Shit’ (Mongane Serote)
It is not the steaming little rot
In the toilet bucket,
It is the upheaval of the bowels
Bleeding and coming out through the mouth
And swallowed back,
Rolling in the mouth,
Feeling its taste and wondering what‟s next like it.
Now I‟m talking about this:
„Shit‟ you hear an old woman say,
Right there, squeezed in her little match-box
With her fatness and gigantic life experience
Which makes her a child,
„Cause the next day she‟s right there,
Right there serving tea to the woman
Who‟s lying in bed at 10 a.m. sick with wealth,
Which she‟s prepared to give her life for
„Rather than you marry my son or daughter.‟
This „Shit‟ can take the form of action:
My youngest sister under the full weight of my father
And her face colliding with his steel hand,
„‟Cause she spilled sugar that I worked so hard for,‟
He says, not feeling satisfied with the damage his hands
Do to my yelling little sister.
I‟m learning to pronounce this „Shit‟ well
Since the other day
At the pass office
When I went to get employment,
The officer there endorsed me to Middelburg,
So I said, hard and with all my might, „Shit!‟
I felt a little better;
But what‟s good is, I said it in his face,
A thing my father wouldn‟t dare do.
That‟s what‟s in this black „Shit‟.
My Brothers in the Streets (Mongane Serote)
Oh you black boys,
You thin shadows who emerge like a chill in the night,
You whose heart-tearing footsteps sound in the night,
My brothers in the streets,
Who holiday in jails,
Who rest in hospitals,
Who smile at insults,
Who fear the whites,
Oh you black boys,
You horde-waters that sweep over black pastures,
You bloody bodies that dodge bullets,
My brothers in the streets,
Who booze and listen to records,
Who've tasted rape of mothers and sisters,
3
Who take alms from white hands,
Who grab bread from black mouths,
Oh you black boys,
Who spill blood as easy as saying „Voetsek‟.
Listen!
Come my black brothers in the streets,
Listen,
It's black women who are crying.
The Birth of Shaka (Oswald Mtshali)
His baby cry
was of a cub
tearing the neck
of the lioness
because he was fatherless.
The gods
boiled his blood
in a clay pot of passion
to course in his veins.
His heart was shaped into an ox shield
to foil every foe.
Ancestors forged
his muscles into
thongs as tough
as wattle bark
and nerves
as sharp as
syringa thorns.
His eyes were lanterns
that shone from the dark valleys of Zululand
to see white swallows
coming across the sea.
His cry to two assassin brothers:
"Lo! you can kill me
but you'll never rule this land!"
The Watchman’s Blues (Oswald Mtshali)
High up
in the loft of a skyscraper
above the penthouse of the potentate
he huddles
in his nest by day; by night
he is an owl that descends,
knobkierie in hand,
to catch the rats that come
to nibble the treasure-strewn street windows.
4
He sits near a brazier,
his head bobbing like a fish cork
in the serene waters of sleep.
The jemmy boys
have not paid him a visit,
but if they come
he will die in honour,
die fighting
like a full-blooded Zulu –
and the baas will say:
„Here‟s ten pounds.
Jim was a good boy.‟
And to rise and keep awake
and twirl the kierie
and shoo the wandering waif
And chase the hobo with „Voetsak‟.
To wait for the rays of the sun
to spear the fleeing night,
while he pines
for the three wives and a dozen children
sleeping alone in the kraal
faraway in the majestic mountains
Of Mahlabathim –
„Where I‟m a man
amongst men,
not John or Jim
But Makhubalo Magudulela.‟
Power Cut (Tatamkhulu Afrika)
Clock‟s glowing digits show
it's four a.m.
I flip a switch:
nothing burns.
Has a pylon toppled in the swift,
black water of the wind?
Candles roll
about under my palms,
fluting nibbling at my skin.
Matches chatter as the box
skids away from my blind,
humiliating hands.
Clock‟s cold
fire stares,
and stares from the dark,
grown alien room,
whispers “No”
to the candles living flame.
Candles flare:
the shadows bolt
up into the corners of the room,
twitch and thrust
like the bug that tries
5
to flee me through the floor.
Sea rolls
uneasily below
the bellowing wind.
Mock-fig‟s
slack leaves splat
against the window‟s shrilling panes.
Islanded,
The room is still.
As I am still,
Islanded in the thin
melancholy of the alone:
those watchers at the ebbing tides
of nights and dreams.
Candles‟ doubles quiver tall
as vigil-tapers in the black
mirror's tideless pool.
Water over weed,
turbulent with flames,
the mirror drowns
my face‟s thousand forms.
They gibber, grin,
horribly howl,
rush the mirror‟s scything rims,
narrow to a line.
Only the eyes still cry
“I am”.
The wind whirls
the leaves one last,
strangulating time:
drops like a stone.
Silence drips
like gutters after rain,
runs,
tiptoeing,
through my ears.
Morning, vast
and formless, leans
against my walls.
Does it or I sigh,
worn with being,
ripe with pain?
The lights suddenly burn.
A dove croons,
familiarly, in the pines.
Old hungers run
through the dry
streambeds of my veins.
Ummi (Tatamkhulu Afrika)
I looked at my hands last night,
and remembered her:
and the rickety stairs that writhed
up to the floor she had made her fief,
6
where sometimes she rented out
a grudging space to carefully screened
practising Muslim gentlemen –
of whom, it seemed,
she had decided I was one.
Tall and gaunt,
arthritis remodelling her limbs,
menacingly black,
old-style walking stick
gripped in her large
as a man‟s hands,
she prowled like some lame tigress through
the monastic, small rooms,
strangely flaming yellow eyes
telling of a rage I could not comprehend.
Evenings,
she prayed,
all her flesh except the face
voluminously swathed,
the rooms suddenly alert
with terror of the God brought close –
and as suddenly distanced when she rose,
casting off her sanctity as she did her robes,
bellowing for the daughter that scrubbed,
and polished, and pursued me
with that other terror:
the lovelorn swoon of her idiot eyes.
Spectrally pale,
with the dead,
un-European bleach
of our bastard race‟s sport,
she liked me for the similar
wanness of my skin;
stooped once and spat
in an eye that had grit in it,
muttering a prayer in a strange tongue;
and she gave me the room
with the little balcony that leaned
out over the old District‟s ruin,
and I would sit there of an evening and watch
the last of the children play
before night fell;
and sometimes on a Sunday,
sleeping late,
I‟d wake
and a starling would be sitting on the rail,
flooding the room with transfiguring song,
and I‟d go out to tell her
it was like home from home,
and she‟d sit there staring at me,
bleakly as a bone.
Widowed, she was mean;
she‟d scoop spilled tea
7
back into the cup, saying:
„the table‟s clean‟.
Only once did she give me
hope for her soul,
proffering cakes with the tea
when my friends from the madrassah came
and I knew pride;
but the cakes were stale,
iron as her thin smile,
and their soured cream
unforgivably shamed.
I think I hated her then;
but she died and I moved on
and still did not understand
why she threw the cakes
into the rubbish bin,
did not speak to me for many days.
But now I‟m looking at my hands,
seeing more than them:
misshapen, mean
as crab‟s claws they cling
to the last of life,
the last of things,
hold only pain.
Our Sharpeville (Ingrid de Kok)
I was playing hopscotch on the slate
when miners roared past in lorries,
their arms raised, signals at a crossing,
their chanting foreign and familiar,
like the call and answer of road gangs
across the veld, building hot arteries
from the heart of the Transvaal mine.
I ran to the gate to watch them pass.
And it seemed like a great caravan
moving across the desert to an oasis
I remembered from my Sunday School book:
olive trees, a deep jade pool,
men resting in clusters after a long journey,
the danger of the mission still around them
and night falling, its silver stars just like the ones
you got for remembering your Bible texts.
Then my grandmother called from behind the front door,
her voice a stiff broom over the steps:
„Come inside; they do things to little girls.‟
For it was noon, and there was no jade pool.
Instead, a pool of blood that already had a living name
and grew like a shadow as the day lengthened.
The dead, buried in voices that reached even my gate,
8
the chanting men on the ambushed trucks,
these were not heroes in my town,
but maulers of children,
doing things that had to remain nameless.
And our Sharpeville was this fearful thing
that might tempt us across the wellswept streets.
If I had turned I would have seen
brocade curtains drawn tightly across sheer net ones,
known there were eyes behind both,
heard the dogs pacing in the locked yard next door.
But, walking backwards, all I felt was shame,
at being a girl, at having been found at the gate,
at having heard my grandmother lie
and at my fear her lie might be true.
Walking backwards, called back,
I returned to the closed rooms, home.
For All Voices, For All Victims (Antjie Krog)
because of you
this country no longer lies
between us but within
it breathes becalmed
after being wounded
in its wondrous throat
in the cradle of my skull
it sings, it ignites
my tongue, my inner ear, the cavity of heart
shudders towards the outline new in soft intimate clicks and gutturals
of my soul the retina learns to expand
daily because by a thousand stories
I was scorched
a new skin
I am changed for ever. I want to say:
forgive me
forgive me
forgive me
You whom I have wronged, please
take me
with you.
This is what I’ll remember (Gabeba Baderoon)
Mist in the park
brings slow clarity to the landscape.
We walk a long circuit from the metal gates
down the straight, formal mall,
9
past the statues and the open spaces falling
to the left and to the right.
After the frost, the trees show
the last of their colour.
Before the steps to the monolith peering
out of the mist – what everything leads to –
crowd the ramshackle roses, formal too,
but blown, their colours like autumn now,
remembered yellow, the pinks and reds touched
with brown. Not brilliant, no longer
what we recall of roses,
but this state before they fall
and the bushes hold life during winter
close as a small spark.
As the garden gradually reveals
itself, we walk into time
and are released to talk of death.
The time it took
to sit in your mother‟s presence
and hear what was being said
when at last she asked for help,
but only for the periphery –
to buy something she had seen
in the newspaper, to read to her.
No request came
closer to the body.
To stay by her bedside
and hear the calm detail of need
was to feel a kind of beauty, impossible
to say, but the beauty of dying, the beauty
of sitting in the presence of dying.
The roses‟ insistent memory,
small collectivity before they fall –
this is what I‟ll remember
as the point where we turned
and became open with each another,
our memories held close
despite the fact that the cold had come,
on time.
Old photographs (Gabeba Baderoon)
On my desk is a photograph of you
taken by the woman who loved you then.
In some photos her shadow falls
in the foreground. In this one,
her body is not that far from yours.
Did you hold your head that way
because she loved it?
10
She is not invisible, not
my enemy, nor even the past.
I think I love the things she loved.
Of all your old photographs, I wanted
this one for its becoming. I think
you were starting to turn your head a little,
your eyes looking slightly to the side.
Was this the beginning of leaving?

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South African Poetry from Protest to Post-Apartheid

  • 1. 1 ENGLISH 2A: SOUTH AFRICAN POETRY FROM PROTESTTOPOST-APARTHEID Date Topic Required Reading Monday 22 April TheBlack Consciousness Movement and Protest Poetry  “What‟s in this Black „Shit‟” (Serote)  “My Brothers in the Streets” (Serote) Friday 26 April The Black Consciousness Movement and Protest Poetry  “The Birth of Shaka” (Mtshali)  “The Watchman‟s Blues” (Mtshali) Monday 29 April Poetry of the Transition  “Ummi” (Afrika)  “Power Cut” (Afrika) Friday 3 May Revisionist Poetry  “Our Sharpeville” (De Kok) Monday 6 May The Truth and Reconciliation Commission  “For all Voices, For all Victims” (Krog) Friday 10 May Recent Poems  “This is what I‟ll remember” (Baderoon)  “Old photographs” (Baderoon)
  • 2. 2 What’s in this Black ‘Shit’ (Mongane Serote) It is not the steaming little rot In the toilet bucket, It is the upheaval of the bowels Bleeding and coming out through the mouth And swallowed back, Rolling in the mouth, Feeling its taste and wondering what‟s next like it. Now I‟m talking about this: „Shit‟ you hear an old woman say, Right there, squeezed in her little match-box With her fatness and gigantic life experience Which makes her a child, „Cause the next day she‟s right there, Right there serving tea to the woman Who‟s lying in bed at 10 a.m. sick with wealth, Which she‟s prepared to give her life for „Rather than you marry my son or daughter.‟ This „Shit‟ can take the form of action: My youngest sister under the full weight of my father And her face colliding with his steel hand, „‟Cause she spilled sugar that I worked so hard for,‟ He says, not feeling satisfied with the damage his hands Do to my yelling little sister. I‟m learning to pronounce this „Shit‟ well Since the other day At the pass office When I went to get employment, The officer there endorsed me to Middelburg, So I said, hard and with all my might, „Shit!‟ I felt a little better; But what‟s good is, I said it in his face, A thing my father wouldn‟t dare do. That‟s what‟s in this black „Shit‟. My Brothers in the Streets (Mongane Serote) Oh you black boys, You thin shadows who emerge like a chill in the night, You whose heart-tearing footsteps sound in the night, My brothers in the streets, Who holiday in jails, Who rest in hospitals, Who smile at insults, Who fear the whites, Oh you black boys, You horde-waters that sweep over black pastures, You bloody bodies that dodge bullets, My brothers in the streets, Who booze and listen to records, Who've tasted rape of mothers and sisters,
  • 3. 3 Who take alms from white hands, Who grab bread from black mouths, Oh you black boys, Who spill blood as easy as saying „Voetsek‟. Listen! Come my black brothers in the streets, Listen, It's black women who are crying. The Birth of Shaka (Oswald Mtshali) His baby cry was of a cub tearing the neck of the lioness because he was fatherless. The gods boiled his blood in a clay pot of passion to course in his veins. His heart was shaped into an ox shield to foil every foe. Ancestors forged his muscles into thongs as tough as wattle bark and nerves as sharp as syringa thorns. His eyes were lanterns that shone from the dark valleys of Zululand to see white swallows coming across the sea. His cry to two assassin brothers: "Lo! you can kill me but you'll never rule this land!" The Watchman’s Blues (Oswald Mtshali) High up in the loft of a skyscraper above the penthouse of the potentate he huddles in his nest by day; by night he is an owl that descends, knobkierie in hand, to catch the rats that come to nibble the treasure-strewn street windows.
  • 4. 4 He sits near a brazier, his head bobbing like a fish cork in the serene waters of sleep. The jemmy boys have not paid him a visit, but if they come he will die in honour, die fighting like a full-blooded Zulu – and the baas will say: „Here‟s ten pounds. Jim was a good boy.‟ And to rise and keep awake and twirl the kierie and shoo the wandering waif And chase the hobo with „Voetsak‟. To wait for the rays of the sun to spear the fleeing night, while he pines for the three wives and a dozen children sleeping alone in the kraal faraway in the majestic mountains Of Mahlabathim – „Where I‟m a man amongst men, not John or Jim But Makhubalo Magudulela.‟ Power Cut (Tatamkhulu Afrika) Clock‟s glowing digits show it's four a.m. I flip a switch: nothing burns. Has a pylon toppled in the swift, black water of the wind? Candles roll about under my palms, fluting nibbling at my skin. Matches chatter as the box skids away from my blind, humiliating hands. Clock‟s cold fire stares, and stares from the dark, grown alien room, whispers “No” to the candles living flame. Candles flare: the shadows bolt up into the corners of the room, twitch and thrust like the bug that tries
  • 5. 5 to flee me through the floor. Sea rolls uneasily below the bellowing wind. Mock-fig‟s slack leaves splat against the window‟s shrilling panes. Islanded, The room is still. As I am still, Islanded in the thin melancholy of the alone: those watchers at the ebbing tides of nights and dreams. Candles‟ doubles quiver tall as vigil-tapers in the black mirror's tideless pool. Water over weed, turbulent with flames, the mirror drowns my face‟s thousand forms. They gibber, grin, horribly howl, rush the mirror‟s scything rims, narrow to a line. Only the eyes still cry “I am”. The wind whirls the leaves one last, strangulating time: drops like a stone. Silence drips like gutters after rain, runs, tiptoeing, through my ears. Morning, vast and formless, leans against my walls. Does it or I sigh, worn with being, ripe with pain? The lights suddenly burn. A dove croons, familiarly, in the pines. Old hungers run through the dry streambeds of my veins. Ummi (Tatamkhulu Afrika) I looked at my hands last night, and remembered her: and the rickety stairs that writhed up to the floor she had made her fief,
  • 6. 6 where sometimes she rented out a grudging space to carefully screened practising Muslim gentlemen – of whom, it seemed, she had decided I was one. Tall and gaunt, arthritis remodelling her limbs, menacingly black, old-style walking stick gripped in her large as a man‟s hands, she prowled like some lame tigress through the monastic, small rooms, strangely flaming yellow eyes telling of a rage I could not comprehend. Evenings, she prayed, all her flesh except the face voluminously swathed, the rooms suddenly alert with terror of the God brought close – and as suddenly distanced when she rose, casting off her sanctity as she did her robes, bellowing for the daughter that scrubbed, and polished, and pursued me with that other terror: the lovelorn swoon of her idiot eyes. Spectrally pale, with the dead, un-European bleach of our bastard race‟s sport, she liked me for the similar wanness of my skin; stooped once and spat in an eye that had grit in it, muttering a prayer in a strange tongue; and she gave me the room with the little balcony that leaned out over the old District‟s ruin, and I would sit there of an evening and watch the last of the children play before night fell; and sometimes on a Sunday, sleeping late, I‟d wake and a starling would be sitting on the rail, flooding the room with transfiguring song, and I‟d go out to tell her it was like home from home, and she‟d sit there staring at me, bleakly as a bone. Widowed, she was mean; she‟d scoop spilled tea
  • 7. 7 back into the cup, saying: „the table‟s clean‟. Only once did she give me hope for her soul, proffering cakes with the tea when my friends from the madrassah came and I knew pride; but the cakes were stale, iron as her thin smile, and their soured cream unforgivably shamed. I think I hated her then; but she died and I moved on and still did not understand why she threw the cakes into the rubbish bin, did not speak to me for many days. But now I‟m looking at my hands, seeing more than them: misshapen, mean as crab‟s claws they cling to the last of life, the last of things, hold only pain. Our Sharpeville (Ingrid de Kok) I was playing hopscotch on the slate when miners roared past in lorries, their arms raised, signals at a crossing, their chanting foreign and familiar, like the call and answer of road gangs across the veld, building hot arteries from the heart of the Transvaal mine. I ran to the gate to watch them pass. And it seemed like a great caravan moving across the desert to an oasis I remembered from my Sunday School book: olive trees, a deep jade pool, men resting in clusters after a long journey, the danger of the mission still around them and night falling, its silver stars just like the ones you got for remembering your Bible texts. Then my grandmother called from behind the front door, her voice a stiff broom over the steps: „Come inside; they do things to little girls.‟ For it was noon, and there was no jade pool. Instead, a pool of blood that already had a living name and grew like a shadow as the day lengthened. The dead, buried in voices that reached even my gate,
  • 8. 8 the chanting men on the ambushed trucks, these were not heroes in my town, but maulers of children, doing things that had to remain nameless. And our Sharpeville was this fearful thing that might tempt us across the wellswept streets. If I had turned I would have seen brocade curtains drawn tightly across sheer net ones, known there were eyes behind both, heard the dogs pacing in the locked yard next door. But, walking backwards, all I felt was shame, at being a girl, at having been found at the gate, at having heard my grandmother lie and at my fear her lie might be true. Walking backwards, called back, I returned to the closed rooms, home. For All Voices, For All Victims (Antjie Krog) because of you this country no longer lies between us but within it breathes becalmed after being wounded in its wondrous throat in the cradle of my skull it sings, it ignites my tongue, my inner ear, the cavity of heart shudders towards the outline new in soft intimate clicks and gutturals of my soul the retina learns to expand daily because by a thousand stories I was scorched a new skin I am changed for ever. I want to say: forgive me forgive me forgive me You whom I have wronged, please take me with you. This is what I’ll remember (Gabeba Baderoon) Mist in the park brings slow clarity to the landscape. We walk a long circuit from the metal gates down the straight, formal mall,
  • 9. 9 past the statues and the open spaces falling to the left and to the right. After the frost, the trees show the last of their colour. Before the steps to the monolith peering out of the mist – what everything leads to – crowd the ramshackle roses, formal too, but blown, their colours like autumn now, remembered yellow, the pinks and reds touched with brown. Not brilliant, no longer what we recall of roses, but this state before they fall and the bushes hold life during winter close as a small spark. As the garden gradually reveals itself, we walk into time and are released to talk of death. The time it took to sit in your mother‟s presence and hear what was being said when at last she asked for help, but only for the periphery – to buy something she had seen in the newspaper, to read to her. No request came closer to the body. To stay by her bedside and hear the calm detail of need was to feel a kind of beauty, impossible to say, but the beauty of dying, the beauty of sitting in the presence of dying. The roses‟ insistent memory, small collectivity before they fall – this is what I‟ll remember as the point where we turned and became open with each another, our memories held close despite the fact that the cold had come, on time. Old photographs (Gabeba Baderoon) On my desk is a photograph of you taken by the woman who loved you then. In some photos her shadow falls in the foreground. In this one, her body is not that far from yours. Did you hold your head that way because she loved it?
  • 10. 10 She is not invisible, not my enemy, nor even the past. I think I love the things she loved. Of all your old photographs, I wanted this one for its becoming. I think you were starting to turn your head a little, your eyes looking slightly to the side. Was this the beginning of leaving?