Of Baugh, lyrical poetry and storytelling

Sometimes In The Middle Of The Story

(For the drowned Africans of the Middle Passage)

Sometimes in the middle of the story something

move outside the house, like

it could be the wind, but is not the wind

and the story-teller hesitate so slight

you hardly notice it, and the children

hold their breath, and look at one another.

The old people say is Toussaint passing

on his grey horse Bel-Argent, moving

faster than backra-massa timepiece

know to measure, briefing the captains

setting science and strategy to trap the emperor.

But also that sound had something in it

of deep water, salt water, had ocean

the sleep-sigh of a drowned African

turning in his sleep on the ocean-floor

and Toussaint horse was coming from far

his tail trailing the swish of the sea

from secret rendezvous, from councils of war

with those who never completed the journey,

and we below deck heard only the muffled

thud of scuffling feet, could only

guess the quick, fierce tussle, the

stifled gasp, the barrel-chests bursting

bubbles rising and breaking, the blue

closing over. But their souls shuttle

still the forest-paths of ocean

connecting us still the current unbroken

the circuits kept open, the tireless messengers

the ebony princes of your lost Atlantis

a power of black men rising from the sea.

-Edward Baugh

From the collection It Was The Singing

Poet and critic Edward Baugh reads this poem on record in his usual unforgettable performance.  The poem appears in Baugh’s second collection of poetry, It Was The Singing, and it is interesting how the reading, the oral quality, the poet’s emphasis on lore, the title of the collection with its particular musical quality, and tradition all come together in a fortified harmony.

The title poem, “It Was The Singing,” gives a resounding dramatic rendition of country people singing at a funeral in a work enriched by tradition. This same is echoed in “Sometimes In The Middle of The Story” since it dramatises a traditional storyteller and his audience interrupted by the passing presence of history, transformed into folklore, into myth. There is that shivering element of the supernatural and a force that drives the human imagination.