Poems from Damiam vincent henry
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I became a writer and poet, the day my mother named me. I was born Damiam Vincent Henry in the very streets of Cape Town.
Being a young male, growing up in the Cape Flats. But I had my reading. I read all types of books, from Map Jacobs to Moby Dick.
Swept away into a world
free from poverty
and institutionalization;
born in the Cape Flats,
I’m reminded coming
from school and
immediately getting lost
in the comic book titled
“Coloureds” written bythe
Trantraal Brothers.
Reading became my
hope. It inspired me to
write.
But imagine seeing
people addicted to drugs,
girls forcedinto
prostitution, and boys
inducted into the number
game. Motherless
children who hadn’t ate
for three whole days,
wearing those same
clothes they wore a
fewdays ago.
These are but few of
many things my eyes had
witnessed; although this
happens everywhere.
We fought our battles
from being bullied at
school, making new
friends, and vaguely
hating our lives. But we’d
never truly know how
our mother would do char
jobs just to keep us in
school. Or how she
starved herself so that
we wouldn’t attend school
hungry; many mothers
can relate. But growing
up and later moving to
Delft. Our mother
becameeven more
protective over my
brothers and I…who could
blame her. We’ve lived
just about everywhere
and eventhough we
pretended getting used to
the idea of staying in one
place. We thought life
was cruel. But our
mother had an antidote to
escaping from the “cruel
life.” Funny, she’d give
each of us a Huisgenoot
while attended to the
people’s washing, and
doing dishes. And we’d
belost in “Liewe Heksie”
and trying to complete
the crossword puzzle.
She had hereye on us
even when it seemed she
was pre-occupied.
Now, residing in
Stellenbosch and being
away from my mother’s
home…I’m reminded by
her words she’d always
quote: “A mother’s work
isnever done.” And now
being a father of two,
understanding what she
meant after all this time.
I dreamt of changing the
Cape Flats but it never
crossed my mind that our
entire world needed
fixing. As one of my role
models said:“Wishing for
the impossible is a flat
stone skipping across
water, bouncing off the
surface, countless times
before sinking.”
Yes, failure is inevitable,
but literature will always
be beautiful.
My mother stood firm in
her beliefs that we
represent God wherever
we go, and now being in
Stellenbosch. Today I'm 26 years old and I'm hoping
to do so through
my writing.
I saw her first, alongside her mother,
My mind roved at the sight of her beauty,
The last memory I have left of her,
Was the first smile...
I am rock, alone in the sea,
cemented in sad are others like me;
We are not dead, nor alive,
From such captivity I can't contrive?
I'm a...
Trapped inside the wrong era.
I falleth in love with Enheduanna,
Knowing I'll never have courage to speak,
doubt is for the weak!
Or so I...
Perhaps, In another life I stood a king.
Or I just a slave.
I was underneath the eagles's wing.
Maybe, a sea-shell swept away; a wave.
In...
by Damiam Henry on October 29, 2014. © Damiam Vincent Henry, All rights reserved
She gave her life to me.
For me. She gave immortality.
I...