In Zanzibar, in 2008, George Elliott Clarke began to write his
"Canticles," an epic poem treating the Transatlantic Slave Trade,
Imperial and colonial conquest, and the resistance to all these evils.
That is the subject of Canticles I (MMXVI) and (MMXVII). In Canticles II
(MMXIX) and (MMXX), Clarke rewrites significant scriptures from an oral
and "African" or "Africadian" perspective. Now, in Canticles III
(MMXXII) and (MMXXIII), Clarke shifts focus--from world history and
theology -- to the specific history and bios associated with the
creation of the African ("Africadian") Baptist Association of Nova
Scotia. By so doing he concludes the most remarkable epic ever essayed
in Canadian letters -- an amalgam of Pound and Walcott -- but entirely
and inimitably his own.