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SOUL ROASTED LIKE CASHEWS…

“Bim(shire’s) best,” someone said. “Madness!” said the rest. The level lands of Barbados hide no one. You must take a stand. You forgot the good fight at CowPastor though the planes rain down their tourists in the national interests on your head. You remain the one, the living fighting "I"; they counted you as no

By Hilary BecklesMay 10, 20151 min read

“Bim(shire’s) best,” someone said. “Madness!” said the rest.  The level lands of Barbados hide no one. You must take a stand. You forgot the good fight at CowPastor though the planes rain down their tourists in the national interests on your head. You remain the one, the living fighting "I"; they counted you as no more. A life lived in the trenches. A soul roasted like cashews upon a pan resting on the blackened stones. A mind without rest, tested at every turn and pressured to buckle for titled rewards.

Now you are in sight of this century. In reach of this boundary; just short by "five fours" to be scored. The battle finds the batsman head down with resolve.

—from the Foreword, In Celebration of Kamau Brathwaite, BIM: Arts for the 21st Century, Vol 4, No. 1 (November 2010-March 2011)


HILARY BECKLES is Vice-Chancellor of the University of the West Indies.  He has authored and edited many books on West Indies cricket history and culture, including The Development of West Indies Cricket: Volume 1, The Age of Nationalism and Volume 2: The Age of Globalisation (1999).

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Hilary Beckles