Boxing Day

Now we are back to normal, now the mind is
Back to the even tenor of the usual day
Skidding no longer across the uneasy camber
Of the nightmare way
We are safe, though others have crashed the railings
Over the river ravine; their wheel-tracks carve the bank
But after the event all we can do is argue
And count the widening ripples where they sank

(From Autumn Journal, Louis MacNiece)

Comments

ish said…
wow. sounds like a typical Ugandan Christmas.

(i jst read that vision article where all the crime that happened on Christmas was summarized into one long lament.)
Iwaya said…
you stole my lines!!! wait, macniece, macniece stole my lines?
modoathii said…
yap, that sums up what i saw.

and goddess, after what i saw,tsk tsk tsk...i ain't back to normal yet. i'm enjoying it.

and as we like to say back home..na bado.

where you at? i gave iwaya my number. holla!
Kenyanchick said…
I don't understand a word of what you've just typed, Baz. But then again, I've eaten too much, and my jeans are too tight. Cuts off circulation.

Wait one minute. That Vision story..
"a freshly chopped head of a human being."

Yeah. The jeans are definitely too tight for me to digest that sentence. I'll try again tomorrow.
modoathii said…
i've read the article, (big swallow of fear)
Baz said…
KC! The very song my heart sings!

Freshly chopped head. Only you would notice that!

Modo, it's not an item on the typical Ugandan menu, so stop panicking.

I am going to laugh until I feel ashamed of myself for laughing.
Anonymous said…
Freshly-chopped head. As in `freshly-boiled prawn toes', no? Frig. These Nigerians are too friggin' close to K'la. Now see what our children, pure and clean, ere, are learning to do. From the acceptable stuff of rat tails and rabbit testicles, to freshly — freshly! — chopped heads. Dang.

And the Bukedde editor, that bugger is a Satan worshipper. I was supposed to kill him, I just can't yet locate him. What's his point? Frig him.

The lines ... isn't this the same Baz who says poetry went out of fashion in the '60s? Okay, I know, I know. Softish mine-heart-pineth-for-thee poetry went out of fashion back then, but if it is a furious, fierce ode, maybe even a tragic one, we are still rolling. Hot lines!
crys said…
u forgot to mention the bored few who just passvely watched it all happen again, hopes of a change this year being so futile. like how u tune to ubc hoping for a new movie and u find it's still Sound of Music showing.

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