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Submitted by David Comissiong
The Late Austin 'Tom' Clarke
The Late Austin ‘Tom’ Clarke

In December of 2015 I produced a newspaper article that acknowledged Barbados’ good fortune of possessing no less than four “living legends” of literature– George Lamming, Paule Marshall , Kamau Brathwaite and Austin “Tom” Clarke.

Well, as we learnt on Monday of this week, Tom Clarke is no longer with us!ย  As a tribute to the late Tom Clarke, and as a “wake up call” to my fellow Barbadians, I now reproduce a slightly edited version of the said article:–

“In just a few months time Barbados will be celebrating its 50th year of Independence. I would therefore like – at this time – to urge the people, organisations, and Government of Barbados to make an effort to identify and catalogue the various “resources” that Barbados possesses, and to resolve to fully deploy and utilize these “resources” for the development of our country.

And one of the resources that I would like to identify and bring to the attention of the nation is the cultural and psychological power embedded in the collected works of Barbadosโ€™ four living legends of literature – George Lamming, Paule Marshall, Kamau Brathwaite, and Austin “Tom” Clarke.

Yes, Barbados possesses no less than four living legends of literature! Just take a moment to think about the significance of that fact. How many other countries can boast of possessing as many as four living legends of world literature? I – for one – cannot think of any! There is no other Caribbean country, no Third World country, no so-called First World nation for that matter, that can claim to possess as many as four living legends of world literature!

But being able to lay claim to these four cultural treasures is a relatively superficial thing! The real issue is – do we recognize the valuableness of the resource that lies in our hand, and are we putting it to good use?

The youngest of the four living legends is the 81 year old Toronto-based Austin “Tom” Clarke, the winner of such prestigious international awards as Canadaโ€™s W. O. Mitchell Prize, Cubaโ€™s Casa de las Americas Prize, and the Martin Luther King Junior Award for excellence in writing. Tom Clarkeโ€™s body of work consists of ten novels, six short story collections and three memoirs, most of which are based either in Toronto or in Barbados itself.

In Clarkeโ€™s Toronto-based stories, we are able to more clearly discern the elements of the true Barbadian, portrayed as they are against a foreign back-drop. And, as Barbadian literacy critic, John Wichkam, has observed – Clarke brings to this act of re-creation a faithful ear for the accent and rhythms of our Barbadian nation-language, and a powerful visual memory.

But there are also the Barbados based novels such as Growing Up Stupid Under The Union Jack, The Prime Minister, and The Polished Hoe, which help us to understand and to come to terms with the trauma of colonialism and the psychic damage that it inflicted

The most senior of our four living legends of literature is 88 year old George Lamming, who is considered to be the dean of Caribbean writers – an accolade bestowed upon him by the great literary critic, C.L.R. James, way back in the 1960’s.

George Lamming is the author of six novels – In the Castle of My Skin (1953), The Emigrants (1954), Of Age and Innocence (1958), Seasons of Adventure (1960), Water with Berries (1971), Natives of My Person (1972) – and of three books of critical essays, namely Pleasures of Exile (1960), Coming, Coming Home (1995), and Sovereignty of the Imagination (2009).

Lammingโ€™s fellow “legend”, Kamau Brathwaite, explained the ground-breaking significance of Lammingโ€™s first novel as follows –

“Then in 1953, George Lammingโ€™s In the Castle of My Skin appeared and everything was transformed. Here breathing to me from every pore of line and page was the Barbados I had lived. The words, the rhythms, the cadences, the scenes, the people, their predicament.”

In addition, C.L.R. James never spared any opportunity to bring to our attention the many profound and cutting-edge cultural/political critiques and perspectives contained in Lammingโ€™s works. A couple examples from just one novel will suffice to prove the point:-

“Free is how you is from the start. Anโ€™ when it look different you got to move, just move! Anโ€™ when you moving say that it is a natural freedom that make you move”.

(Season of Adventure, 1960)

“Until the age of ten, Powell and I had lived together, equal in the affection of two mothers…….. Powell and I were taught at the same Primary school. And then the division came. I got a public scholarship which started my migration into the world of the educated….the elite…… which now shut Powell and the whole village right out of my future….. I attached myself to that new privilege…….. I believe that the mad impulse which drove Powell to his criminal defeat was largely my doing……. I am responsible for what happened to my brothers.”

(Season of Adventure, 1960)

The second living legend in order of seniority is 86 year old Paule Marshall, who was born in Brooklyn, New York City to Barbadian parents, and who not only grew up in a tightly knit Barbadian immigrant community, but also visited and lived in Barbados for varying periods of time.

The highly acclaimed Paule Marshall has produced five novels, four of which explore the history, culture, vernacular, predicament and spirit of the Barbadian people “at home and abroad” – Brown Girl, Brownstones (1959), The Chosen Place, The Timeless People (1969), Praisesong for the Widow (1983), Daughters (1991), and The Fisher King ( 1998) – and a Barbados-steeped memoir entitled Triangular Road (2009).

Ms. Marshallโ€™s novels are filled with Barbadian female characters who would resonate with and speak in a profound way to the current generation of Barbadian girls and women, if only these novels were made widely available in our country! I refer to such characters as middle-aged Silla Boyce and her Brooklyn born daughter, Selina, whose coming of age is explored in Brown Girl, Brownstones; racially conscious Merle Kinbona ,who defends the cultural integrity of the island in The Chosen Place, The Timeless People; and the sophisticated 1980’s young professional – Ursa Mackenzie – who, out of a sense of love for her country and her politican-father, sabotages the latterโ€™s election campaign and his Cahill-type plan to sell out the country, in Daughters.

Marshallโ€™s novels also express what Kamau Brathwaite has described as the “literature of re-connection” with Africa. Thus, in describing a number of the quintessentially Barbadian characters in Chosen Place, Timeless People, Ms Marshall reaches back to Africa:-

“A…… strikingly tall, lean old man….. His face, his neck, his clean-shaven skull, had the elongated intentionally distorted look to them of a Benin mask or a sculpted thirteenth century Ife head”….. Whereas, Delbert, the shopkeeper “was huge with massive limbs….. He was the chief presiding over the palavering …. the colourful shirt he had on was his robe of office; the battered Panama hat….. his Chieftanโ€™s umbrella, and the bottle of white rum he held, the palm wine with which he kept the palaver and made libation to the ancestral gods.”

Our fourth living legend is the 85 year old Kamau Brathwaite, whose works of poetry, drama, history, literacy criticism, and cultural analysis are far too numerous to list!

I will therefore satisfy myself with stating that Kamau Brathwaite is easily one of the worldโ€™s most outstanding intellectuals and scholars, and that he should have won the Nobel prize for literature many times over!

I will also recommend that our educational authorities should deem at least three of Brathwaiteโ€™s works essential and mandatory texts for our secondary and tertiary curriculum:- The Arrivants (Kamauโ€™s first, Pan-African based, trilogy of poetical works); Ancestors (Kamauโ€™s second, and Barbados-centred, trilogy); and Barbabajan Poems (Kamauโ€™s encyclopaedic exploration of Barbadian poetry, history, landscapes and culture).

Fellow Barbadians: we will not have the living legends with us forever! Let us, therefore, show them our appreciation, love and respect – now! And let us have the good sense to do ourselves a big favour by embracing, reading, and making full use of their invaluable works!”


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109 responses to “Austin ‘Tom’ Clarke: Let’s Honour Our Legends Before It’s Too Late”


  1. That’s a great idea to honour them now and always. We can’t tell them thank you very, very much…enough, in all the caribbean, people cant imagine how powerful is their whole task and love for all of us…
    Beloved all of them…Read and read back them it is pure happiness. our appreciation goes to those who love deeply the Caribbean and their place…

    From our heart of the Caribbean neighbouring our deep gratitudeThank you very much for them…
    JG

  2. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Let them know how appreciated they are, those are national treaures, the only resources worth recognizing. Others will embrace them more…if you don’t. They are gifted and blessed with true wealth and knowledge.


  3. We thank the late Austin ‘Tom’Clarke for the contribution he mad through his literary works.

    Three spheres of activity Barbadians do not give deserved respect and support – the environment, sports and things cultural.


  4. George Lamming was the guest speaker at Carifesta 1981 here in Barbados.I have listened to that speech countless times and never tire of its beautifully woven language and insights into persons and things Caribbean.We are worse off for not focusing on our common heritage and our common destiny.We allow politicians and forces of economic deviance to plunder our worth and sell our resources human and material to the highest bidder like chattel.


  5. I met George Lamming once at a restaurant near the Austin campus of the University of Texas. Even though I was the only West Indian in the group, he completely ignored me and focused all his attention for more than an hour on a (white) secretary who worked at the University.
    They left together.


  6. Chad
    Do you have the right man?Lamming or Clarke?


  7. Trust me, it was Lamming, Afro and all.


  8. I had the pleasure of briefly meeting and working with George Lamming. He was the consummate scholar and gentleman.


  9. Apart from their outstanding personal academic achievement what have these purported literary legends done to uplift their country globally like for instance Mr Frank Worrell, Mr Garfield sobers or Ms Rihanna Fenty .


  10. Tom Clarke was us. For those of us who cannot write, for those of us who cannot speak, his writings reflected the authentic Barbadian. And I am amazed how to managed to keep it so real after more than 50 years absence.


  11. @balance June 27, 2016 at 10:10 PM “Apart from their outstanding personal academic achievement what have these purported literary legends.”

    They are not purported. They are real, real literary high achievers.

    If you want to know what a pop singer sounds like listen to Rihanna.

    If you want to know cricket watch Garfield Sobers, or Frank Worrell play.

    If you want to know what a Bajan is, read Lamming, or Clarke, or Brathwaite, or Marshall.

    Long after we are all dead they will have defined Bajanness for posterity.

    That is why they are great.


  12. @ balance I expected different from you. Writing is not simple, it is an awsome gift.
    @ Simple Simon. For once I agree with you Simple Simon. To take it further, I am amazed that there is this claim the Rihanna has done so much for Barbados and that she has put it on the map. In essence that may not be true. The fact is that she is popular make Barbadians want to claim her and be proud that she is from our island. But if truth be told she does not sing our musical artforms or promote them. She could be a singer from any part of North America. On the other hand. The life and all that we know has been captured by our esteemed writers. All that makes Barbados different has been written down for generations to come, they will not have stories that are dim memories of their grannies but living vibrant works of art to transport them back in time of the way Barbados really was. Their’s is a gift of posterity. Fifty years from now no one knows what songs will be popular. Rihanna’s songs may be like the 40’s music while the classiic treasure in those books will remain forever young.


  13. Thanks David, but Tom Clarke published one last book in 2015, a memoir called ‘Membering. I haven’t yet read it, but I believe it is longlisted for the 2016 OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature.


  14. We should thank Comissiong for penning this appreciation of these four writers. I was at a function on Saturday night when the host reminded us that Austin (Tom) Clarke was ailing and I woke up to the news on Sunday morning that he had died. I have a couple of his books including the Giller prize winning novel โ€œThe Polished Hoโ€ and I saw the theatrical production in Toronto but he first came to my attention when I overheard a discussion of his book โ€œAmong Thistles and Thornsโ€ when I was in high school.

    I have a copy of George Lammingโ€™s magnum opus โ€œIn the Castle of my skinโ€ and I note it was dedicated to his mother and Frank Collymore (the doyen of Bajan writers). However, it is the introduction by Richard Wright which is very fascinating Wright writes and I quote

    โ€œwithout adequate preparation, the Negro of the Western world lives, in one life many lifetimes. Most white lives are couched in norms more or less traditional: born of stable family groups, a white boy emerges from adolescence, enters high school, finishes college, studies a profession, marries builds a home, raises children, etc. The Negro, though born in the western world, is not quite of it due to policies of racial exclusion his is the story of two cultures: the dying culture in which he happens to be born, and the culture into which he is trying to enter-โ€œ

    That introduction was written in 1953 and except for a few words is just as relevant today. BTW has there ever been a better title for a book written about black people?

  15. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    @Balance, They tell our stories and expose us to the reality of our existence. Many cannot handle that naked truth. See the excerpt above from George Lamming’s “Season of Adventure” about Powell.


  16. “Long after we are all dead they will have defined Bajanness for posterity.

    That is why they are great.”

    ๏ˆAnd what can they define about Bajanness that people in our age groups do not know- and what about thenAlfred Pragnell and his satirical but vivid commentaries about what then must be described as Bajanness?


  17. “@Balance, They tell our stories and expose us to the reality of our existence. Many cannot handle that naked truth. See the excerpt above from George Lammingโ€™s โ€œSeason of Adventureโ€ about Powell.”

    Fortunately or Unfortunately i did not have to read Mr Lamming’s ” Season of Adventure” to expose me to the reality of my existence having grown up stupid under the Union jack but why then after a lifetime are we clamouring for their works to be included in our educational curriculum? I seem to be missing something somewhere.


  18. “Heather June 27, 2016 at 11:00 PM #

    @ balance I expected different from you. Writing is not simple, it is an awsome gift.”

    Am I not entitled to a different view? Had I followed the expected script would thoughtful debate have been generated? How many children in our schools have been exposed to the works of theses ‘great’ men for whom national honour is sought?

    I might be myopic but it’s just that I see contribution to national development perhaps through a narrow minded lens. I was at the eye doctor yesterday. I should have asked him to change my spectacles.


  19. Some of us give truth to the statement growing up stupid under the Union Jack.


  20. @balance

    It is not a matter of disagreeing, it is what you have offered to support your view i.e. economic consideration only. You have demonstrated total ignorance as to the contribution of the Arts to building the identity of a people.


  21. “It is not a matter of disagreeing, it is what you have offered to support your view i.e. economic consideration only. You have demonstrated total ignorance as to the contribution of the Arts to building the identity of a people.”

    You can take a cow to the pond but you cannot make him drink.THANK YOU, NONETHELESS.


  22. “David June 28, 2016 at 4:58 AM #

    Some of us give truth to the statement growing up stupid under the Union Jack.”

    and yes your very comment reflects that


  23. That you would even attempt to compare the contributions of these literary giants to Rihanna who is a product of American pop culture is so stupendous that it literally boggles the mind.

  24. are-we-there-yet Avatar
    are-we-there-yet

    Balance;

    I suspect you have disappointed several of your BU fans, including me, by your unbalanced contributions to this blog. Read them again with your usual understanding, and do the honourable thing.


  25. You need to use those spectacles you bought to read ‘In the Castle of my Skin’.


  26. yes the books have exposed to us in literary form to the naked truth of what life was in Barbados in those early days and have recorded the events of those times for posterity which our fore-parents though vividly descriptive when recounting those times have been unable to do but my narrow-mindedness honed through my bajanness have tempted me to query how have the writings contributed to improving of national development or standard of life or quality of people.

  27. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @David June 28, 2016 at 4:58 AM #…”Some of us give truth to the statement growing up stupid under the Union Jack.”

    That sir is an extremely sharp elbow. You can be an excellent close-in fighter doing much damage quickly. LOLL

    There will always be brickbats so one imagines the critique was intended to generate debate.

    Amazing however that the written word is panned as it was.

    Reading the seminal works of these authors about Bajan life creates a similar ‘wow’ experience for a Bajan or a Trini or any ‘real thinking person’ to that from Twain’s ‘Huckleberry Finn’ or ‘House for Mr Biswas’. And even for a tale like ‘The Great Gatsby’.

    It’s strange to compare great tales of the slices of life and texture from any given society simply to popular songs or singers whether pop, R&B or even folk/calypso/reggae/country & western or other special people. Very strange.

    But at least that sprout generated nuff posts. And that is exactly what an opinion writer seeks: additional sprouts stemming from his/her opinions.


  28. at 5:20 AM #

    That you would even attempt to compare the contributions of these literary giants to Rihanna who is a product of American pop culture is so stupendous that it literally boggles the

    not really

  29. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    What is your point Chad?

    I met Kofi Annan years ago he shook my hand spoke to me for 90 and went on to talk to dignitaries and other more pertinent people who were befitting his engagement there.

    Did you want or miss Lamming hitting on you?

    I thought you were a man sorry male but I was wrong and your real persona is female though, de ole man dating himself and showing my homophobia, so I retract that politically incorrect remark.

    We are here paying respects to our senior sons and daughters’ literary acumen and you, in your inimical style make this inane comment about “the man did not hold your male appendage and do homage to you while you were in the audience.

    You does read whu you write though?


  30. Why the hell wunna don’t leave balance alone?

    Perhaps if wunna seek to genuinely answer his questions it could be made a lot clearer to everyone how these unquestionably talented Bajans get to become ‘legends’.

    balance’s use of Rihanna may have been an unfortunate slip, but how does one become a ‘legend’ when, 50 years later, they have made NO DIFFERENCE to anything. Talents are GIFTS. We all have various them, THEY DO NOT IN THEMSELVES qualify us a ‘legends’
    A Legend is an individual who has utilised and exploited his talents to bring significant positive change to society.

    Winston Churchill is a legend. Mandela was a legend. Barrow was a legend.

    Caswell has even more talents than Churchill did – but rather than BUP ..and bring needed revolutionary change to Barbados, he has chosen, like Clarke, Brathwaite, Lamming and Marshall, to write down a lotta shiite about our dire situation.

    What?!!!
    40 years down the road the grandson of this ‘legend’ will write down the same shiite too…?

    @ balance
    Man you kicking this morning….


  31. @Dee Word

    The idiotic comment can be compared to Preconco workers questioning if the Emancipation statue should not be removed in the same way Maloney’s Preconco House, illegally placed in the centre of the Lears roundabout, also removed.


  32. @Bush Tea

    Did you not read Lamming, Clarke, Naipaul at school? These authors gave terrific insight into how our societies worked. CL James in your book made zero contribution to our society as well? Do not argue for arguing sake for crissakes. It deflates your credibility.


  33. @Bush Tea

    balanceโ€™s use of Rihanna may have been an unfortunate slip, but how does one become a โ€˜legendโ€™ when, 50 years later, they have made NO DIFFERENCE to anything. Talents are GIFTS. We all have various them, THEY DO NOT IN THEMSELVES qualify us a โ€˜legendsโ€™

    How do you know it is a slip? We commenters have to interpret it as an insight into balance’s way of thinking unless he withdraws it. Will he? Do you deny the contribution of the ARTS to how we humans help to define ourselves, build identity, enrich history etc? The problem with balance is that he becomes like a bull in a china shop when he reads Commissiong’s writings.

  34. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    Syllogism for active consideration to whom it may concern.

    For one to be of any worth one must save lives,

    Doctors save lives, doctors are worth something.

    I am a scavenger, soil technician, seamstress, painter, carpenter, mechanic. I don’t save lives therefore I am not worth anything

    That might help those of us who are surprisingly exclusionary in their reasoning today though, to be truthful, if we all agreed on everything here we would be veritable clones


  35. @balance June 28, 2016 at 4:43 AM “what about Alfred Pragnell and his satirical but vivid commentaries about what then must be described as Bajanness?”

    We are not excluding Alfred Pragnell. Although truthfully Pragnell was mainly reader of Timothy Callender’s excellent stories.

    Timothy too, defined us.


  36. @PUDRYR

    Understand the bigger point you are making, however, note there are somethings we should all agree and there is no shame in it.


  37. In the final analysis, RESULTS COUNT.
    People who have the talent to write with emotion, conviction and style are GIFTED. Bushie read those books (was forced to) at school, but all they did was chronicle the ACTUAL EVERYDAY experience around….
    FIFTY years on, the same damn books are relevant…. people continue to be mendicant; the Government is even worse; poverty is nearly back to square one; NATIONAL PRIDE is nearly back at emancipation levels…
    What the hell is ‘legendary’ about that?

    How would we have classified someone like Lee Kuan Yew, had he been as effective in Barbados as he was in Singapore?
    …as GOD?

  38. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Oh lawd, Mr Blogmaster…I think it is fair to say you appreciate the written words of ‘great writers’. Your elbows sharp this morn.

    @Pieces, I deleted a reference I had made to Chad45 from my earlier post as I too was taken by his ‘female’ persona as you called it. I however looked at it from the other angle. I didn’t get why the home-boys was so perturbed that the debonair, acclaimed fellow Bajan was fulfilling a possible additional personal achievement. You seemed to have nailed it.

    @BushTea, your way with words continue to astound. Give Caswell a break, man. It takes a very big ego (or 10 x times balls) to run a country.

    Why can’t you allow Caswell to massage his appropriately sized ego in his way!

    There are lots of other people out there who can also lead a charge.

    Let the man maintain his sanity and work diligently as he sees fit…do you believe that you can browbeat him to action or are these repeated calls your way of stroking your own ego now past the stage when you should have sprung forth!!!!

    Oh lawd!


  39. @”I will therefore satisfy myself with stating that Kamau Brathwaite is easily one of the worldโ€™s most outstanding intellectuals and scholars, and that he should have won the Nobel prize for literature many times over!”

    I second this.


  40. Read Clarke, or Lamming, or Brathwaite, or Marshall and then read Nobel Prize Winner Isaac Bashevis Singer and you will see what we mean that writers of this caliber can quintessentially define a people. Ever if you are not an Orthodox Jew living in an early 20th century Eastern European ghetto you “get it.”


  41. You get the humanity of a people, who continue to be in spite of oppression.


  42. “TORONTO โ€“ Austin (Tom) Clarke is being remembered as a pioneering black Canadian writer who rose above an impoverished childhood in Barbados to achieve top literary honours, meet the Queen, and inspire generations of authors.

    โ€œAustin Clarke really is the grandfather of black Canadian literature,โ€ acclaimed author Lawrence Hill said in a telephone interview Monday, a day after news of Clarkeโ€™s death broke.

    โ€œHeโ€™s the first black writer in Canada to become internationally renowned, to win major national prizes and to be celebrated internationally, including throughout the black diaspora.

    โ€œHe really broke the barriers.โ€

    http://www.680news.com/2016/06/27/austin-clarke-remembered-for-breaking-barriers-for-black-writers/


  43. No wonder we are going DOWN….
    Our ceiling is MUCH too low.

    If our ‘legends’ are just talents who merely sit around (mostly in white countries) writing shiite about how challenged our societies are, ..it is no wonder that Caswell will settle for doing the same shiite – instead of risking life and limb actually MAKING A DIFFERENCE.

    No wonder there is no revolutionary FERVOUR among our young people.
    No wonder personal sacrifice is a bad word in Barbados…

    If you aim for the stars you may get to the moo.
    We seem to aim for the first floor….
    and applaud when we make the second step…


  44. @Bush Tea

    It is because some of us read and appreciate the message from our literary greats that it fuels the good fight by some of us, still.


  45. @chad99999 June 27, 2016 at 8:55 PM “I met George Lamming once at a restaurant near the Austin campus of the University of Texas. Even though I was the only West Indian in the group, he completely ignored me and focused all his attention for more than an hour on a (white) secretary who worked at the University. They left together.”

    It may well be that the university’s secretary was escorting the gentleman at an official university dinner. It is nt at all unusual for university’s to provide social opportunities, dinners, receptions etc for their distinguished guests. What would you have the university do, have the distinguished gentleman teach all day and then send him to eat alone at his hotel every evening? Would you do that to any of your house guests?

    Don’t we all take our guests out to social occasions?


  46. @ Dribbler
    Caswell can take it.
    He has the needed balls, he is TRULY a talent, and his mind is as sharp as a pin.

    Caswell’s ONLY limitation is that he was raised in a society that managed to convince him that mediocrity was good enough and that it was too much to expect that he could outdo such INFERIOR talents as Winstone Churchill.

    Churchill, on the other hand, was a mediocre student, a mediocre military officer, and basically a sweet-talker who had been raised in a society that managed to convince him that he was a world leader and ENTITLED to change history.

    As the mind is, so is the man.

    These people are/were GREAT TALENTS.
    There are no damn ‘legends’….


  47. @balance June 28, 2016 at 4:43 AM “And what can they define about Bajanness that people in our age groups do not know.”

    Ahh!!!, but it is not just about our age groups. It is about our children, and our children’s children and their grand children. If these writers had not written how would our great grandchildren know who we were,

    When we are dead our brains will become useless mush in less that 24 hours, which is why the WRITTEN WORD is so important.

    In the beginning there was the WORD.


  48. @ David,

    BU could “honor” Austin Clarke by highlighting his contribution to the fight for equal rights for black people.


  49. @ David
    It is because some of us read and appreciate the message from our literary greats that it fuels the good fight by some of us, still.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    You just proved Bushie’s (and balance’s) point.
    Judging from the ‘good fight ‘seen from Bajans to date, these ‘literary greats’ have NOT been very effective…..
    The last ‘good fight’ seems to have come from Bussa…. and he could not read.


  50. @Simple Simon

    Have to agree with many of your comments, especially the last one.

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