Chapter Twelve

Chapter 122,398 wordsCompleted

At dawn the neighbourhood buzzes with anticipation for Obierika’s daughter’s uri. Women and children gather at Obierika’s compound to help the bride’s mother cook; Nwoye’s mother and Okonkwo’s youngest wife Ojiugo bring baskets of food, while Ekwefi stays behind after following the priestess Chielo, delaying her arrival. Ezinma fetches water for the bride’s mother and later joins the group. The compound fills with temporary cooking tripods, pounding of foo‑foo, and the slaughter of two goats, one of which is a massive goat bought from Umuike and displayed as a live offering. While the women cook, a distant cry alerts everyone to a stray cow; most rush to return it, leaving only a few women to tend the fire. After the cow is reclaimed and a fine paid, the women resume cooking. The first pots of palm‑wine arrive from the in‑laws, and the bride’s attendants begin grooming the bride. Maduka sweeps the front of the obi, and guests arrive carrying goatskin bags and mats, some with carved wooden stools. Okonkwo offers his snuff‑bottle to Ogbuefi Ezenwa, who accepts and comments on the expected number of wine pots. The giant goat is paraded for admiration and then returned. The in‑laws’ delegation, led by the suitor Ibe, arrives with successive waves of wine pots, eventually totaling fifty. The suitor, his elders, and the bride’s party form a half‑circle; the bride, her mother, and other women enter, shaking hands, dressed in finery, with the bride’s mother leading. Kola nuts are presented; the eldest brother of the visitors breaks the first, offering blessings of life and friendship, which the crowd answers “Ee‑e‑e.” The bride’s family declares their daughter will bear many sons; the visitors respond affirmatively, promising mutual respect and alliance. Palm‑wine is drunk, food served—huge bowls of foo‑foo, soup, and yam pottage—and torches are lit. Men sing praises; the bride eventually dances, holding a cock, while musicians play lively songs. After the night’s festivities, the guests prepare to depart with the bride for a seven‑market‑week stay with the suitor’s family, stopping to pay courtesy visits to prominent men including Okonkwo. As a parting gift, Okonkwo gives the guests two cocks.