Chapter Thirteen

Chapter 131,586 wordsCompleted

The ekwe’s mournful “Di‑go‑go” sounds across the night as the cannon booms, announcing the death of Ezeudu, the oldest man of Umuofia. The message spreads through the nine villages, naming the clan (“Umuofia obodo dike”), Okonkwo’s village (“Iguedo of the yellow grinding‑stone”), and finally the name of the deceased. The villagers convene for Ezeudu’s funeral, where drums, guns, and cannons roar; warriors in smoked raffia skirts and chalk‑painted bodies dance, and various egwugwu spirits appear—some violent, including a one‑handed spirit carrying a basket of water, and others harmless. Ezeudu, who held three prestigious titles, is to be buried after dark with a glowing brand. The one‑handed spirit approaches the corpse, delivers a lengthy speech about Ezeudu’s past lives, and then departs as the funeral reaches fever‑heat. In the climax, Okonkwo’s gun explodes; a fragment pierces the heart of Ezeudu’s sixteen‑year‑old son, who had been dancing with his brothers. The crowd falls silent as the boy lies in blood. Because the killing was inadvertent, the earth goddess declares it a female crime; Okonkwo must flee the clan for seven years. That night he gathers his most valuable belongings, his wives and children weep, and Obierika and several friends transport his yams to Obierika’s barn. Before dawn, Okonkwo and his family slip away toward Mbanta. At daybreak, a warlike crowd from Ezeudu’s quarter, including Obierika, attacks Okonkwo’s compound, setting fire to his houses, destroying his walls, slaughtering his livestock, and razing his barn—administering the goddess’s justice without personal hatred. Later, Obierika sits in his obi, ponders why Okonkwo suffers for an accidental killing, recalls the twin children Okonkwo had cast away, and muses on the earth goddess’s demand that any offense be punished or the whole land will suffer, noting that “if one finger brought oil it soiled the others.”