Ode to Ballaké Sissoko
by michwo
Posted: Monday, September 19, 2016 Word Count: 133 Summary: I couldn't make sense of André Breton's "Ode to Charles Fourier" so I wrote a much shorter one of my own and dedicated it to a Malian kora player. |
Ode to Ballaké Sissoko
Precious like the gold and salt in Timbuktu
Your notes go echoing
Possess
Painstakingly plucked
That meticulous clarity
Of scribes’ transcriptions of old Arabic
On goatskin manuscripts
In sand-strewn libraries
Sand is omnipresent here
Leo the African came as a merchant
René Caillié came three hundred years later
The first European to see it and live
Bamako is green and burgeoning
The quickly falling notes cascade
Down River Niger’s rapids hauntingly
One thousand one hundred and thirty-one miles away
Is the hot and arid desert of the Hoggar
In Algeria’s south
And Tamanrasset
Where Father Foucauld died
That death heralded a new beginning
For not to exploit or explore did he come
But to share
We are people of One Book that is yet to be read
Precious like the gold and salt in Timbuktu
Your notes go echoing
Possess
Painstakingly plucked
That meticulous clarity
Of scribes’ transcriptions of old Arabic
On goatskin manuscripts
In sand-strewn libraries
Sand is omnipresent here
Leo the African came as a merchant
René Caillié came three hundred years later
The first European to see it and live
Bamako is green and burgeoning
The quickly falling notes cascade
Down River Niger’s rapids hauntingly
One thousand one hundred and thirty-one miles away
Is the hot and arid desert of the Hoggar
In Algeria’s south
And Tamanrasset
Where Father Foucauld died
That death heralded a new beginning
For not to exploit or explore did he come
But to share
We are people of One Book that is yet to be read