- Poet: Grace Nichols (1950-)
- Year: 2020
- Form: Free verse
- Key techniques: Extended metaphor, irony, enjambment
About the poet
Grace Nichols is a Guyanese-British poet born in Guyana who moved to the UK in 1977 and quickly became a central voice in Caribbean-British literature. Her debut collection won the Commonwealth Poetry Prize and established her as a leading figure in postcolonial poetry, exploring themes of identity, diaspora, womanhood, and ecological awareness.
Historical context
The poem reflects growing global awareness of environmental degradation, especially in the Caribbean, where rising sea levels, pollution, and tourism have reshaped coastlines. Postcolonial nations like Guyana have often borne the brunt of ecological harm from both local mismanagement and global capitalism. This poem’s juxtaposition of natural beauty and pollution critiques the myth of tropical paradise, exposing the consequences of climate change and consumerism.
Literary context
Nichols’ work challenges exoticised portrayals of the Caribbean, drawing upon the genres of ecopoetry and diasporic literature to merge environmental reflections with personal memories. The speaker’s role as both insider and outsider evokes the diasporic consciousness: returning to a homeland altered by time, capitalism, and ecological ruin.
Key ideas
- Environmental degradation
- Memory and inheritance
- Diaspora and dislocation
- Nostalgia versus reality
- Consumerism and climate crisis
- Loss of cultural heritage