Wisdom from Africa Poetry from Year of The Poet (Vol 44)

Kimberly Burnham
3 min readDec 7, 2020

Featured in The Year of the Poet August, 2017 Volume 44.

Romeo and Juliet, African Style Conservation

Cheetahs fear huge dogs
except one tiny cheetah cub all alone
a woman rescues him
when a man kills his mother

Romeo raised with Juliet
an Anatolian Sheppard pup
together like pack mates
she lays her head on his back
he playfully raises a black and yellow spotted paw

All grown up
she barks at every cheetahs
save for Romeo
together they chase off the fear of extinction
changing the space between
the wild world and farms of Africa

The past is cheetahs killing cattle
farmers killing cheetahs
shooting these carnivores
onto the endangered species’ list

Today Anatolian sheppards
raised with cattle claim the herd as family
barking off cheetahs
run — run 70 miles an hour away from this farm
the huge dogs guarding the future

So all can live
as happily as Romeo
and his Juliet

Hippo Baby A Day or Two Old

Look out on the water
the wind whipping by
feel the speed of the boat
gaze at the distant spray of a waterfall

And suddenly there he is
a hundred pound baby
the size of a large dog
miniature next to his mother
petite pink ears twitching

Delighting people in passing boats
who travel thousands of mile to see him
in the Zambezi River
for this moment a few days after his birth
soon he will weigh tons
grown on water plants and shoreline vegetation
above the natural splendor of Victoria Falls

Today he is cute and tiny
drawing awwww from those who see him
as he splashes up diamond rainbows
then basks with egrets and water bucks

Forget not he is born wild
territorial and aggressive
responsible for more African deaths
than lions and rhinos
take pleasure and give respect

Lion family poetry with Kimberly Burnham Photo by Leonard von Bibra on Unsplash

Lioness Almost Tame

For now many generations
lions see humans in jeeps
roaring around the countryside

Tawny cubs playfully coming near
taking their cues from momma
the lioness watchfully relaxed

Humans taking delight
hearing her before she is seen
in the thrill of a short distance between
a lioness calling for her pride
appears out of the dense bush

Two old males rest after stuffing themselves
on a water buffalo stuck in shallow watering hole mud
and news of a pride of lionesses and cubs
suddenly there in the grass

The guides talk excitedly
last know locations exchanged
a line of jeeps
waiting turns a few at a time
visit the lioness and her cubs
as babies learn they have nothing to fear
from humans in jeeps

Enchantment comes with responsibility
to be that human
protecting the environment
for generations of cubs to come
to be the one
from whom there is
nothing to fear

The Year of the Poet Volume 44 August 2017, Inner Child Press, Poetry Posse, Kimberly Burnham, Hazelnut Trees.

Originally published in The Year of The Poet (Vol 44) at http://www.innerchildpress.com/the-year-of-the-poet.php on August 1, 2017.

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Kimberly Burnham

Writer, Poet, Ekphrastic Writer-in-Residence, Nerve Whisperer, Brain Health Coach, Author of The Traveling Brain: Illuminating Peace Poetry in 5000 Languages.