Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- No Wings
- Preface to Second Edition
- Foreword to Second Edition
- Introduction to Second Edition
- A Note of History
- Should I Ever…
- THE COUNTRYSIDE
- AKAN
- EWE
- GA-ADANGME
- DAGOMBA
- HAUSA
- THE TOWN
- Tumble-Down Woods
- Tough Guy in Town
- In the Streets of Accra
- Snuff and the Ashes
- Radio Dance Hour
- This is Experience Speaking
- Palm Leaves of Childhood
- Hot Day
- The Literary Society
- It's Ritual Murder
- The Wrong Packing Case
- Lines on Korle Bu
- Pay Day
- The Walk of Life (Agbezoli)
- Peace
- Heaven is a Fine Place
- Ata
- Complaint
- To My Mother
- Oh! My Brother
- The Homeless Boy
- The Lone Horse
- The Perfect Understander
- The Woods Decay
- On Parting
- To the Night Insects
- The Blind Man from the North
- A Second Birthday
- In God's Tired Face
- The Executioner's Dream
- Had I Known
- Re-incarnation
- Ancestral Faces
- ‘O Forest, Dear Forest’
- My Sea Adventure
- The Passing of The King
- Patriotism
- African Heaven
- The Ghosts
- The Herdsman from Wa
- Pa Grant Due
- The Mosquito and the Young Ghanaian
- Unity in Diversity
- The Journey to Independence
- Ode to the Hon. Dr. Kwame Nkrumah
- The Dawn of the New Era
- The Meaning of Independence
- National Anthem
- The Contributors
- Index
The Ghosts
from THE TOWN
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 August 2019
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- No Wings
- Preface to Second Edition
- Foreword to Second Edition
- Introduction to Second Edition
- A Note of History
- Should I Ever…
- THE COUNTRYSIDE
- AKAN
- EWE
- GA-ADANGME
- DAGOMBA
- HAUSA
- THE TOWN
- Tumble-Down Woods
- Tough Guy in Town
- In the Streets of Accra
- Snuff and the Ashes
- Radio Dance Hour
- This is Experience Speaking
- Palm Leaves of Childhood
- Hot Day
- The Literary Society
- It's Ritual Murder
- The Wrong Packing Case
- Lines on Korle Bu
- Pay Day
- The Walk of Life (Agbezoli)
- Peace
- Heaven is a Fine Place
- Ata
- Complaint
- To My Mother
- Oh! My Brother
- The Homeless Boy
- The Lone Horse
- The Perfect Understander
- The Woods Decay
- On Parting
- To the Night Insects
- The Blind Man from the North
- A Second Birthday
- In God's Tired Face
- The Executioner's Dream
- Had I Known
- Re-incarnation
- Ancestral Faces
- ‘O Forest, Dear Forest’
- My Sea Adventure
- The Passing of The King
- Patriotism
- African Heaven
- The Ghosts
- The Herdsman from Wa
- Pa Grant Due
- The Mosquito and the Young Ghanaian
- Unity in Diversity
- The Journey to Independence
- Ode to the Hon. Dr. Kwame Nkrumah
- The Dawn of the New Era
- The Meaning of Independence
- National Anthem
- The Contributors
- Index
Summary
Listen … it is evening in Kumasi,
And the lengthening sunlight fingers stroke the town
In a final caress, and move away westward,
Drawing a blind across the sky
Behind them as they move.
Can you hear the dark blind moving?
Listen!
Listen to the groaning noises,
Wild, nightmarish, fiendish wails …
Voices of dreaming town
Dreaming now at nine o'clock.
At Kejetsia … the city's centre,
Bright new lights are on:
But here, where I stand,
In this deserted corner,
The lights are fading in our hearts,
And lovers have to part at sundown
If they want to meet tomorrow;
So let me go to Kejetsia
To get a taxi home.
Cars will cross at Kejetsia
If they dare not come near here.
They won't, or dare not come near here,
Because, from where you are,
You can hear
The offensive-defensive singing of a gang
And the clang and yell of slogans,
To keep their spirits up,
Or frighten attackers off.
Listen!
Did you hear it too?
The wailing of the pregnant woman
Caught under a crumbling wall blown up?
The children, terrified, and running away to safety
And the heavy clatter of the boots
Of a pair of racing police men?
Did you count the explosions too?
Five, I think, in a rumbling sequence,
The last, the loudest of them all …
And five more homes will bleed!
I must run to Kejetsia,
To the mocking brightness at the centre
Of the pregnant town in labour,
To get a taxi home.
Kejetsia was bare and quiet
Except for a lone figure … waiting …
Looking for a taxi home.
He moved away as I approached,
And would not speak to me.
His outstretched hand was thin and black,
And fluttered in the wind.
A passing taxi picked him up,
And picked me up too.
Then a curious pleasure flushed his face
To see me by his side.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Voices of GhanaLiterary Contributions to the Ghana Broadcasting System 1955–57, pp. 232 - 236Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2018