by Patricia Jabbeh Wesley
The city is not a crippled woman at all. This city
is not a blind man at a potholed roadside, his
cane, longer than his eye, waiting for coins to fall
into his bowl, in a land where all the coins were lost
at war. When Monrovia rises, the city rises with
a bang, and I, throwing off my damp beddings,
wake up with a soft prayer on my lips. Even God
in the Heavens knows how fragile this place is.
This city is not an egg or it would have long
emerged from its shell, a small fiery woman
with the legs of snakes. All day, boys younger
than history can remember, shout at one another
on a street corner near me about a country they
have never seen. Girls wearing old T-shirts speak
a new language, a corruption by the same ugly war.
You see, they have never seen better times.
Everyone here barricades themselves behind steel
doors, steel bars, and those who can afford also
have walls this high. Here, we're all afraid that one
of us may light a match and start the fire again
or maybe one among us may break into our home
and slash us all up not for our wealth, but for
the memories they still carry under angry eyelids.
Maybe God will come down one day without his boots.
Maybe someone will someday convince us that after
all the city was leveled, we are all the same after all,
same mother, same father, same root, same country,
all of us, branches and limbs of the same oak.
Last updated July 20, 2021