John Agandin

John Agandin Poems

When I die,
Cry not your heart out
Nor weep any tears at my grave
I will not see you, cry for me now.
...

With light nervous steps, he trod in
As one aroused from an upshot of gin
And stood abashed, a shadow ill-prepared,
His sealed quivering lips unassured
...

There is a house, half in ruins
At the other end of the village
Battered and ravaged by wind and rain
Half the walls lie prostrate
...

Some nights, when the moon is happy
Smiling broadly from its heavenly home.
A small crowd gathers in the yard;
Grandma, mother, aunty and the others
...

Behold the light fades and rises not
And the cute little stars hide in shame
The moon fears to show her face
And day and night become as one.
...

I heard a man had a dream once
It was a bold dream
And they shot him down cold
Dreams are dangerous things!
...

The sun is searing hot and pitiless
Hurling down fierce fuming rays.
The earth roasts under his angry gaze
As meat over blazing coals.
...

Weeding the fields couldn't be more delightful!
Though backs are breaking in the noonday heat
Palms blistering from gripping rigid hoe sticks
Sweat trickling down the groins of labouring kinsmen
...

It was a beauteous night, and dusty
And we were all mum and droopy
Whilst the preacher droned on
And the rest of the world lived on
...

Take a walk down the village path
And read the tales on its face.
A thousand tales told and retold
In the marks of those gone before.
...

I do my crying in the rain
Shrieking with the thunder
Howling with the wind
So that my tears are washed away
...

On an hallowed spot at home,
Stands a tall, mighty baobab.
Steeped in myth and legend
A massive and hefty girth
...

I walk my beat in many cities and markets
Up and down in the perspiring sun.
From Tamale to Kumasi Kejetia
From Techiman to Takoradi market circle
...

The rain is falling all year round
Falling, falling, falling… everywhere!
It rains on the mountains and hills
And on the shops in the valleys.
...

The day and the hour draws nigh
When all shall return to Him
Who did form them of word and clay
And did give to all His own breath
...

It is a topsy-turvy world this
For not the doers that count
Not the men in the arena
Not those faces marred by dust and blood
...

Oh bright and innocent Lilium,
Why do you wail in the mountain breeze?
Golden Splendour, scented Robina,
Why envy the crimson-rose?
...

Hurt not the trees!
The trees! The trees!
Oh hurt not the trees!
These majestic giants,
...

First came the pale ants
Who gazed in wonder upon the land
Stretching to the horizon and beyond,
Man, bird, and beast roamed free
...

Today I looked through my window
Silent and absent-mindedly.
I saw the verdurous crowns of many trees
The multi-coloured roofs of many homes
...

John Agandin Biography

John Agandin is a teacher, writer, and blogger.)

The Best Poem Of John Agandin

When I Die

When I die,
Cry not your heart out
Nor weep any tears at my grave
I will not see you, cry for me now.

When I die,
Wear no sorrows or regrets
And bear neither grief nor pain on account of me
I will be singing Hallelujahs.

When I die,
Do not come dressed in fancy clothes
Smelling like a thousand lavenders
I can not admire you then, dress for me today.

When I die,
Read me no long tributes,
And compose me no epic verses
I will not hear you, praise me today.

When I die,
Put me quietly in my grave
Give your money to the poor
And your tears to the oppressed
And leave me in peace and quiet to rest.

John Agandin Comments

John Agandin Quotes

Which side are you on? Are you fighting on the part of ignorance, prejudice, bias, blind and unquestioning adherence to culture and tradition, or are you fighting on the side of reason, of the spread of knowledge, and of enlightenment for all?

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