Menu Close
over the man
Image by DeepAI.org

Afro Blues ended with the assumed suicide of Floyd, the main protagonist, after his partner had been executed. Shahida, the sequel novel, which I never finished (maybe one day), revealed that Floyd had gone into the Ténéré desert, alone, with the intention of shooting himself but, instead, he just shot into the sand. This poem relates that long walk into loneliness and despair.

Two years before writing this poem I spent a wonderful fifteen day adventure in the Ténéré desert trekking with Tuareg of the Aire people, Afro Blues, written before that journey was, towards the end of the story, staged in the Ténéré although my knowledge of that region at the time was based on National Geographic searches.

Over the Hill

Over the hill
then on to home.
A long hard road is still to roam.

Up into the hard brown mountainsides;
my feet drag me along,
but the final valley
is getting close.
And so is the heat.

Slate crumbles and bruises my feet,
Rock fall insists on breaking my bones,
Yet still I struggle on,
Til the end of the road.

The scorpions are nearing,
The serpents lie in wait,
Yet I respect my adversary,
It is unavoidable.

And the long haul
Over the grey brown rocks
Is inevitable.
My time has come and I must choose this path.

Though marble crumbles below my feet,
And treacherous gravels
Make me slip,
I must stand my ground.
I must return to my home.

I must tread softly
over acacian thorns,
steal quietly,
pass the sidewinder’s tail.

Then I will make it down to the east…
Out, into the yellow ocean,
To ride the giant waves.

But I am no longer the young surfer,
In charge of his element.
No longer in command of the sea.
I must follow the surf where it takes me.
And,
Though I know where that shall be,
I give in.
I must make it home.
To that one place
Where heaven once met earth –
That’s my way out of hell.
My bones are aching,
And I am tired,
But I surge on,
Because the end of the road is not yet come.
But soon.

I cross the mountains of Aire,
I tread the inferno
For which I so much care.

And the Ténéré waits,
Impatiently.

I said I would be back,
On that special day.
I said this is my home,
The end of my road.

My eyes see the browns of Aire behind me,
Yet I am blind.

My eyes see the golden Sahara ahead,
Yet my heart sees black.
Not night,
Black –
Absence of colour.
Just absence,
And silence.

As I surf the first wave
My feet tread water.
Yet I make progress,
Up the relentless dune.

And still my journey is not done.
What was once a joy
Is now duty,
And an ending –
Of my suffering.

And the pains linger,
as I walk through the sand,
barefoot,
or so it feels.
My soles burn
But my soul is burnt.
My limbs ache.
I am the lamb
On its way –
To torture.
Yet I must continue.
I must fight the demon of the desert,
Tiredness.
I can not help
But get more tired.
But I must walk
Before I sleep.
For there is something I must see,
Some place I must go,
My home, my final home.

And through the crisp, cold desert night,
I see,
Without my eyes,
That I am nearly there.

Still the viper lurks in surprise,
The scorpion sharpens his needle,
And the sun burns reason out of my head.
In eight hours we will be there,
And I will be dead.

***

Copyright © 01.12.2000 – Kevin Mahoney

page

Would you like to hear from us when new posts are uploaded?
A maximum of 1 mail per month.   Yes   No


0 0 votes
😞 Please Rate the above Poem 😊
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
We use cookies only to provide functionality. View more
Cookies settings
Accept
Privacy & Cookie policy
Privacy & Cookies policy
Cookie name Active

Who am I?

Website address is: https://www.writernotafighter.com.

Site Owner, Administrator and Author: Kevin Mahoney based in 82178 Puchheim, Germany.

Comments

When visitors leave comments on the site we collect only their name (or alias) and, optionally, their email address. If you enter your email address it is safely kept under lock and key on the website's database and only I can see it when I approve the comment. The approval process is only to prevent hate, fake information and bots etc (see terms and conditions here).

. I will never pass your email address on to any other party - not for love nor money.

An anonymized string created from your email address (also called a hash) is provided to the Gravatar service to see if you are using Gravatar. The Gravatar service privacy policy is available here. After approval of your comment, your profile picture, if you have one on Gravatar, is visible to the public in the context of your comment.

Visitors may also choose to get notifications when people add more comments to the post that they themselves have commented and/or to any replies to their own comments. In this case you must enter your email address to get those notifications. The privacy and security is, in this case, identical to that explained above for visitors that choose to enter their email address when writing a comment.

In addition, visitors may wish to receive one email each month containing links to new posts that have been added in the previous month. In this case, because we have to follow spamming laws, your email address is stored in the very secure and private database of our email marketing provider, Brevo. Once again I can see those mail addresses as can Brevo Administrators. Brevo is a very reputable mail marketing company that follows all European and American privacy laws.

Visitor comments are checked through an automated spam detection service named Akismet Spam Protection.

How long we retain your data & Unsubscribing

If you leave a comment, the comment and its metadata are retained indefinitely. However, if you sign up to be notified for other comments and replies to your comments then you can unsubscribe on the comment form. Just put your cursor over each icon on the form and you will see a tip telling you to unsubscribe by clicking that icon.

For users that subscribe to our once a month email (showing posts that were added in the previous month), we store just your name (or nickname/alias) and your email address in our protected mail provider's database (Brevo) - that information remains in the safe and secure custody of Brevo until the user unsubscribes at which point both name and email are deleted. The website owner/administrator (Kevin Mahoney - author of the posts and writings) can also see that information.

if you have subscribed to receive notifications of new posts then each email that you receive from writernotafighter will contain an unsubscribe link.

Media

No users are able to logon to this website and are thus unable to upload any form of media.

Cookies

My website & blog does not use cookies.

However, in order to include certain automated functionality, for exsample the additional functionality in comments, the attractive image & text grid of all posts and the notifications of new posts, I must use external, third party software plugins. I only use plugins from world wide, renowned and reputable software providers that serve many thousands of websites. In otherwords secure and stable software. I am an ex.professional software developer, now retired.

To my knowledge, if they use cookies, then it is purely to serve the expected functionality and not to capture information or to bother you with adverts etc.

Save settings
Cookies settings