Sunday 20 September 2015

Love in the Wood

Come my love,
Come let us lay,
let us brood, under the starry heaven,
like penguins in a polar earth.

Come my love,
Come, let us lay,
Let me feel the suppleness of your loins
and the tenderness of your bosom.

Come my love,
Come let us lay,
Let us give the shrubs scenes and acts,
Let the bush applaud as our hearts are knit,
on the bed of palm fronds and a pillow of log.

Come my love,
Let us lay on nature sheerest mat,
Roll in the hay with my tongue buried in yours
like Adam and Eve in Eden.




























About Oliver Onyibe
Oliver Onyibe is a/an |Clerisy| |Social Engineer| |Lover| |Eclecticist| 

Monday 31 August 2015

Rain in Lagos

I hear splatters of rain in Lagos,
I hear the unrhythmic splash of the tears of cherubs,
Sizzling on rooftops and
filing potholes in Iyana-Ipaja.

Rain in Lagos,
The hours are wet and cold with misty air,
The torrent sweeps the Marina walkway clean,
floods the Ebute-Meta walkway,
and invades gated houses in Lekki.

Rain in Lagos,
Commuters scamper for shades,
Bus conductors hike their bus fare,
Third Mainland Bridge is gridlocked,
Cars crawls up to their destinations,

Rain in Lagos,
The salt seller hides her bucket of salt,
and the sleepy sugar seller counts her losses,
come rain, come shine,
Lagos lives, business thrives.



Monday 10 August 2015

Dusting your Phone-book

Two incidents happened to me yesterday which actually left me thinking and reassessing my relationships with people, my day began on a slow mode at work, and few minutes before noon, I received a phone call from Alex, a former course mate in my university days and an unregular caller and we chatted about our university days, until I asked of (Kate) the lady that proofread my final year thesis, I still have her number on my phone but haven’t called her for 3 years.



I boasted.



He told me of her passing about a year ago from maternal mortality, that news dampened my day.



The second incident was a phone call from a former crush, initially I was reluctant in picking her calls, so I waited for the third ring starring at the phone like it’s a fresh boobs, I picked and the following conversation ensued between us;
Me: Hey Peju, how are you?
Peju: Fine, Oliver! And you? I must add that you sound well.
Me. Fine, thank you, how’s family and work and to what do I owe this call?
Peju: Why should I have your phone number in my phone-book if I cannot call you.
That statement struck me; I have had Kate’s phone number for years and have never called her, just checking up on her, never.



Although, one cannot deny the fact that the advent of mobile phones and the internet has done some good to humanity, however it has also disrupted interactions and relationships, and no aspect of our life is spared from this disruption, even the means of love-making has diversified as a result.



I once had to reduce my circle of friends on Facebook, because ordinarily I find it difficult keeping up with 75 friends, how much more 750.
So, please I implore us, scroll through our phone-book and call that old time friend, that call could be the last.


Much love...





Tuesday 23 June 2015

Margaret is Pearl

How do I write
Of a beauty so flawless,
A soul so virtuous
A heart with shimmering iridescence
Margaret is pearl,
With a beauty of the orient lustre
The fair lady, with no spot
With skin that glows
Like the noonday sunlight,
Hair that flows like Euphrates River in Adam’s Eden 
Pearl is rare, like Margaret
Her smiles melt cold heart,
Moisten desert,
Margaret is pearl
A gem among women,
With luminescent eyes

That speaks into dark souls.

Saturday 18 April 2015

Stay Here



lets stay together, 
I will mutter no word
Stay here,
let me smell the fragrance
of your sweet perfume,
be wrapped in the cocoon
of my brave arm,
and let me shield you 
from the fears of an unknown tomorrow
Stay here for a million years,
put your hand on my chest
and feel the warmth of my chest hair,
Stay here
let me warm the cockles of your heart
on this freezing harmatan night,
Stay here
for you are my sprouted dream 
of yesteryear.

Conversation with Papa

We sat around the evening fire warming our cold scaling skin, dried like a smoked tilapia fish from the harmattan breeze. My joy knew no bound as I sat beside him, he constantly cracked his knuckles and spat into the burning fire, his eyebrows were grey, he was aged in wisdom and in physique. I listened with rapt attention as he recalled the beautiful memoirs of his boyhood, when Lagos/Ibadan expressway was not bloodthirsty, when children played on the streets and attended schools without the fear of rapists or kidnappers, the days when you do not have to rob a bank to eat good food, suddenly he sighed and murmured,'the good old days'.
I could no longer stomach the storm raging in my belly, I was quick to ask 'what happened to those days'?
I screamed loud,'we are constantly being raped by your generation, the nascent democracy is stunted, our beloved nation is on the edge of precipice, she has become a theatre of absurdity, a den of corruption with the world wildest breed of profligate politicians, our hospitals are inhospitable, our universities has become an abattoir, our roads are death traps, he watched and listened as I tried to rewrite the Christian holy book of lamentation.
He spat into the fire again as he called out to the little boy and begged him to fetch us more firewood, he coughed and spat into the fire for the umpteen times.
He requested for the cold cup of water I had with me that had become lukewarm, he collected it and thanked me, he tried to lure me into another discussion on the benefits of warm water, I kept mum, he took a gaze at me, and he immediately sensed my glaring lack of interest in that health talk.
At this moment, his voice was becoming faint, I moved closer to this sage who is the patriarch of my genealogy,  with tears welling up in my eyes, I asked him how do we come out of this 'wahala'?
He gave me a stern look and asked me what I knew about Switzerland and the Swiss model of government...
I racked my brains immediately to avoid a break in this fertile intellectual intercourse between two generations, I was quick to recollect my previous conversation with grandma whom we fondly called ‘Iya Agba'. Mama's usual summary is that love without marriage is a lesser evil compared to marriage without love and that the 1914 amalgamation of southern and northern protectorate of Nigeria is a marriage without love, which is the greatest of all evils. My father detests me having any form of conversation on national issues with 'Iya Agba' because he assumes her to be an ethnic bigot, mama never fails to tell anyone how she was serially raped by Nigerian soldiers during the Biafran war, she considers the manstra 'one Nigeria' a mirage.
She tells whosoever cares to listen that the 100 years old error of Fredrick Lugard can be corrected without bloodbath,  she opined that what separates us is stronger than what binds us, and if brotherhood is an obligation, that Swiss model of government is a strong cord to keep us tied. Absolutely multicultural with people living together peacefully notwithstanding different languages and religion. Switzerland has true federalism, with the national government responsible for only about one-third of government spending.  The president and vice president of the confederation is largely ceremonial and they are elected by the federal assembly from among the members  of the federal council for one year terms that run concurrently. She emphatically states that Swiss executive is one of the most stable governments worldwide. Since 1848, it has never been renewed entirely at the same time providing a long time continuity.
My young mind considers 'Iya Agba' to be an intelligentsia par excellence, but how do I tell her that our beloved Naija is too volatile and the pseudo-democracy is nascent, that the Swiss model cannot work here.
I excused myself for midnight snacking and to be back.




About Oliver Onyibe
Oliver Onyibe is a/an |Clerisy| |Social Engineer| |Lover| |Eclecticist| 

Friday 17 April 2015

365days Without Chibok Girls


Time really does fly,
 Its been 365 days
Since we were forcefully adopted,
 It been one year of pains, agony.

This memory hurts,
the memory of never coming home,
I am now a woman,
my innocence has forcefully been taken from me,

I am nursing Mohammed,
He’s a happy child, the eternal scar of my grief,
Do no weep for me,

I am the offspring of a greedy society,
the propitiator of a selfish deity.
I hope the gods accept me,
I hope other girls live,

Now that I die.
















NB: Today 14/April/2015. We remember the Chibok Girls forcefully adopted from their town by Boko Haram (an Islamic militant group) in Chibok, Bornu State, Nigeria.












About Oliver Oliver
Oliver Onyibe is a/an |Clerisy| |Social Engineer| |Lover| |Eclecticist|

Omolewa



The necklace that endows my manhood,
Child is beauty,
You are the beauty of my soul,
The upshot of my love juice,

Omolewa, 
my treasured mirror,
plinth of immortality,
In your eyes I see my soul,
The muse of my masterpiece,

Omolewa,
the ensue of a love nest,
Child is halcyon,
You are the wind that calms
the fuss of my soul,

I cherish you timelessly. 


























About Oliver Oliver
Oliver Onyibe is a/an |Clerisy| |Social Engineer| |Lover| |Eclecticist|

Monday 23 March 2015

Christmas in Chibok


No melodious drumbeats
No stomps of dancing feet,
All day as dry as bone, in bitter pain and agony,
Unclad trees by harmattan breeze
The maidens of the town are missing
Christmas in Chibok,
No Halima to cook the rice,
Chibok is a ghost town,
The hens stroll around
No rice grains to grind
Christmas in Chibok
No red roses
Grief is black
The mothers mourn their maidens

Saturday 21 March 2015

Bathsheba

The harmatan breeze blew,
the night went cold and dry,
Her thoughts ruled the consciousness of my being.
Suddenly I heard footsteps,

Her presence baked my heart
like oven-fresh Agege bread.
sagaciously she struts,
like a hen in a rooster house,
straight, blank she stood like a palm tree.

On her glossy chest,
pointed her silky breast,
divinely positioned like the stars of heaven.
Alluring was her perfume
like the witch-hazel
in the garden of Eden,

I began to writhe
like a dog on heat,
I held her svelte body,
buried my tongue in the juices of her mouth.

My snake awoke,
head-butted my boxer shorts like a plough horse,
eager to cultivate a farmland.
Delved into her farmland, combed through,
wee-wee in it, died.

She grabbed it,
gave it life with her mouth,
again it came alive
like the rod of Moses in the Jewish Torah.

Parted her red sea,
swam until the sea went dry,
came out alive
and nodded like the Agama lizard.



About Onyibe Oliver
Oliver Onyibe is a/an |Clerisy| |Social Engineer| |Lover| |Eclecticist| 
Find him on twitter @osawaruonyibe