The poems in this section are chosen for their range of feeling about human relationships. They are about courtship, marriage, parenthood and bereavement. They deal with different kinds of love and different kinds of grief.
Hyena
A hunters’ poem from Lesotho. Throughout this poem, the description shifts to the first person singular to give the hyena’s own words.
The hyena is the greedy one among the wild beasts,
The one that drops a bone is a small one.
Hunters’ Salutes
The Battle of Tumu Tumu Hill
A Gikuyu song from Kenya, describing a battle during the Independence struggle in the 1950s. General Kariba’s group in the Kenya Levellation Army fought the British on Tumu Tumu Hill near Kirimukuyu. The heroism of Waruanja who went disguised to spy out the British position, and of Kanjunio, the girl who brought back his report, and of Gakuru who sacrificed his life to destroy the machine guns, are all commemorated.
Listen and hear this story
Of the Tumu Tumu Hill!
The Gimma
A Gonga song from the Kafa Highlands of south west Ethiopia. During the mid-nineteenth century, according to tradition, the Kafa king asked his people to prepare for war against the Gimma, a powerful sultanate on their northern borders. The people refused to fight.
If we do not present the Gimma with big bulls,
Large steers, beautiful concubines, ivory and slaves,
The Cattle Raid
A Masai poem from Kenya, describing a raid on the cattle of the Somalis. The first half boasts of the raiders’ skill in evading detection — by the Europeans playing golf, by the police askaris and by the night watchman who snored ‘like a hippo‘. The second half rejoices over the beauty of the cattle they have seized.
The Europeans playing golfu,
Ho! We saw them!