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
- The Poetry of Drums
- Across the Prah
- The Tale of Ananse and Twala the Thief
- Ananse's Punishment
- Ohia and the Thieving Deer
- ‘The Iron Bar’
- Drum Proverbs
- Afram
- A Fisherman's Day
- Komenda Hill
- Ahanamanta (Harmattan)
- Mami Takyiwa's Misfortune
- New Life at Kyerefaso
- No Ten Without Nine
- EWE
- GA-ADANGME
- DAGOMBA
- HAUSA
- THE TOWN
- The Contributors
- Index
Komenda Hill
from AKAN
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
- The Poetry of Drums
- Across the Prah
- The Tale of Ananse and Twala the Thief
- Ananse's Punishment
- Ohia and the Thieving Deer
- ‘The Iron Bar’
- Drum Proverbs
- Afram
- A Fisherman's Day
- Komenda Hill
- Ahanamanta (Harmattan)
- Mami Takyiwa's Misfortune
- New Life at Kyerefaso
- No Ten Without Nine
- EWE
- GA-ADANGME
- DAGOMBA
- HAUSA
- THE TOWN
- The Contributors
- Index
Summary
O Komenda Hill, in war a bastion
In peace a forum, I've seen your glories,
And O, am yours and all for now and aye,
Far and wide you dominate land and sea
Whose breezes salute you, and consecrate.
Your dome the sun scans, your vales the rains deepen,
But, indomitable, you stand serene.
O sacred hill, I hail your large welcome:
To the student knowledge distilled, the sick
Wine, the traveller beauty, the care-worn peace.
But it's your surrounds I adore, and keep:
Their morning greens dew-pearled, and fresh, and pure;
Their farms well-patterned, varied, and tended
To raise a royal palm, to milk-fill the
Coconut, to sugar the cane, to feed the grain.
Then night, which hides your wounds and brings perfumes,
Invokes the moon's light or a harbour's eyes
To jewel your sea, its rocks and its sands.
Live on, O noble hill, live on, to shelter
Your soft-eyed student, to guard your secrets,
To protect your peasantry, and to change
My doubts to faith, my heart's darkness to light.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Voices of GhanaLiterary Contributions to the Ghana Broadcasting System 1955–57, pp. 103Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2018