You are here: HomeNews2020 10 17Article 388483

General News of Saturday, 17 October 2020

Source: pmnewsnigeria.com

How renowned poet, J.P Clark, was buried according to wish

In accordance with his wish in a poem entitled, My Last Testament, renowned Nigerian poet and playwright, Professor John Pepper Clark, popularly known as J.P. Clark was Thursday buried at his country home in Kiagbodo, Delta State, less than three days after his demise.

He was buried exactly 11am after a brief lying in state witnessed by few family members and prayers said by Pastor Jolomi Guoti and Pastor Ken Okochu of Trinity House (representatives of Pastor Ituah Iguodalo}.

The late lyrical poet’s remains had earlier landed Kiagbodo Town at about 8:48pm, before it was conveyed in a wooden boat to his house at JP Clark Creek Island in the outskirts of the community.

Youths in the community later carried the casket that the Delta State Government Ambulance had conveyed from the Asaba International Airport to the island.

Clark, who was born on 6 April 1934, was one of Nigeria’s foremost lyrical poets and playwright. The writer who was also known for his controversial travelogue, America, Their America, a book about his experiences in the United States, which he criticized for its crass materialism, obsession with sex and ignorance about people of other places, passed on on Tuesday, 13 October 2020 after a brief illness. He was known for poems such The Casualties, Abiku, Night Rain, to mention a few and plays such as Song of a Goat, Ozidi Saga, The Raft etc.

However, before his demise, after a distinguished career as a poet, playwright and academic spanning more than six decades, he had earlier written about how he wished to be buried in a poem entitled, My Last Testament.

In that poem Clark published in his collected poems entitled, Full Tide, he had stated how he wished to be buried. He had said he shouldn’t be taken to a mortuary or a church, whether he dies in or out of town. But rather he should be taken home to his own,”to lines and tunes, tested on the waves of time. He also said it should be done in three days. “If Moslems do it in a day,/ You certainly can do it in  three days / Avoiding blood and waste,” he said. He also left some words of advice for his children.
                

(A Poem by JP Clark)

This is to my family

Do not take me to a mortuary,

Do not take me to a church,

Whether I die in  or out of town,

But take me home to my own, and

To lines and tunes, tested on the waves

Of time,

… let me lie in my place

On the Kiagbodo River.

If Moslems do it in a day,

You certainly can do it in three,

Avoiding blood and waste,

And whatever you do after,

My three daughters and my son

By the only wife I have,

Do not fight over anything

I may be pleased to leave behind.