A LETTER TO MY DEAD SISTER
Mark Da’ar’s Family,
Dutsen L. Mangu Village.
20th Nov. 2017
Felt it’d be nice to write to you dear sister,
Even though I didn’t get a reply, last I did.
But I’ve strong faith and also share in the believe of the afterlife.
There is not much to say, if spirits can read minds
Then I expect you to read mine
I’d rather go extremely straight, as you knew me to be.
If I had heard this before hand, I would protest, it can’t come to be
The doctor confirmed you dead, I was told
The pain went viral in my body, my heart became cold
I no longer felt the attachment of my spirit, body and soul
It was a shock to me, of cause, I felt it so hurt
‘Really missing you’ is an understatement, compared to what I’m going through.
I hate myself for not acting like a brother and expressing to you; “I love you…”
But does it matter now? You’re gone and that’s the truth.
I’m now like a vessel, very empty,
pleading for alms like a captive
My questions needs to be brim with answers,
I stand here staring to the sky, from the canter
Now who would listen to my clumsy jokes?
Who would teach me how to place the pot?
How to cook, when to start and when to stop
Who would show me, which hand should be on the cord?
As I sing, play and entertain the listeners of my song?
Now were do i run to, sister were do i run to.
I cried and mourn as my heart bleed
Wishing someone could listen to my plea
Sister! Why did you leave so early?
We were suppose to celebrate, when I’m twenty
You were just twenty three, but the way you loved makes you seem elderly
Please tell me now;
What heart will listen to my clamouring?
What ear to my pitiful anger, which grows in me like a tumoure?
In the black hole of my plaintive throat
Hauling myself, getting stock to my pillow, as I cry all night through
With curiosity and great expectation, I thought I would like to know;
How it feels to be dead…
But since I can’t understand the dead
Since I’ve never listened to their words
Then, even if I weep, gently, gently
Or cry roughly, bitterly of my torment
Can you still listen to my clamouring?
Or your ears to my sobbing heart?
If so, then uplift me of this bereavement
And clear the depts. Of grieve from my accountable heart
Make (our elder) brother to be understandable,
And make love in our family to be inevitable
That! I would be expecting from you…
Yours lovely
Sign
Brother Jethro
