Poetry by Tafara Gava

Poetry by Tafara Gava

Victoria Falls

she didn't intend to

appear–

without appearing. she didn't

.

mean to wash her hair

eternally, a white

sheet

.

cascading to rocks

jagged and balled like fists.

she whips it

.

back, and locks unfurl

till the hair

is

.

air–

machine-gun firing,

thundering

.

earth.

for whom this ritual?

is it for the man

sporting concrete skin, jodhpurs,

a rifle, one arm cocked at his

concrete waist?

.

contrapposto–

he will propose:

noose her

.

with a gold ring–

name her after

his widow mother whose other

.

children

are countries. it’s as decided

as concrete–

.

she is a bride, gown

billowing into rainbow.

he is

.

a groom ready

to leap–

into nuptials, eon-old waters.

.

Schwarze Kafka

.

sprayed and swept away–

dada is kafka’s

roach, nietzsche’s

.

horse. hungry he

slipped out

of grease-mired overalls,

.

musk of dirt and

iron, to sit me on his lap.

intrusive thoughts–

.

impinge themselves on the blank

sky of his mind.

bent on play i said

.

dada i am “der” and you “die”

daddy–

here is the toy

.

gun. here is the

gas–

aber was ist das?

.

it is easiest, dada, says

er/sie/es ist

to pretend numbers he logs

.

are not death certificates in another

country. mother

finds dada still

.

grease-soaked,

dada cradling his child. she

smiles against the low

.

hum of tv reeling

another congo war. another american

black, crack headed, ghettoised,

.

is thrust–

into a police car, cuffs

of lost keys,

.

and this is another child

gun-firing dada and i from the south

of sudan. we are all

.

black–

a shard like shrapnel

of fernsehgerät

.

splinters dada’s eye

and mother, as if it were an intrusive

thought, sweeps

.

sprays

away a cockroach surviving

the end of black people

.

on tv–

and dada does not see.

he slips out

.

of consciousness,

of grease–

a horse beaten.

.

Half-smoked

.

i am waiting

to forget. even my watch–

can't tell when

.

amnesia arrives.

i dissolve

into this harare mbare market.

.

it's not me

but my shadow

these people

.

will miss. not my fragrance,

not my face.

so what am i

.

if not a half-smoked cigarette,

day old

and rain-beaten?

.

brutalist buildings

stomp me. in the city

everyone is brutus.

.

i am poor

in people.

how do i sleep

.

when sleep is

what i am waiting

to forget.

Tafara Gava

Written by

Tafara Gava

Tafara Gava is a Zimbabwean-born poet and novelist. He divides his life amongst Harare, his hometown, the Black Forest in Germany, and some cities in the United States's East Coast. His work has appeared in Mount Hope Magazine, Blood + Honey, and Poetry Habitat. His poetry is forthcoming in the Kalahari Review.

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