Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter 25748 wordsCompleted

When the District Commissioner reaches Okonkwo’s compound at the head of an armed detachment and court messengers, he finds a small group of men seated in the obi. He orders them outside; they comply silently. Through his interpreter he asks, “Which among you is called Okonkwo?” Obierika replies that Okonkwo is not present. The Commissioner, growing red‑faced and angry, threatens to lock up the men unless Okonkwo is produced immediately. The men murmur, and Obirika offers to take the Commissioner to where Okonkwo is, suggesting the Commissioner’s men might help. The Commissioner, misunderstanding the offer, remarks on the locals’ “love of superfluous words.” Obirika, with five or six companions, leads the party through a narrow round hole in the red‑earth wall into a small bush behind the compound, the only entrance for birds. The group moves quietly, crushing dry leaves underfoot, until they reach a tree where a body hangs. Obirika stops and says, “Perhaps your men can help us bring him down and bury him.” He explains that strangers must handle the corpse because, according to custom, a man who commits suicide is an abomination, his body is evil, and his own people may not touch it or bury him. The Commissioner asks whether they will bury the body like any other man; Obirika replies they cannot, only strangers may, and that they will pay the Commissioner’s men to do it, then perform sacrifices to cleanse the land. Obirika, gazing at the hanging figure, erupts, calling Okonkwo “one of the greatest men in Umuofia” and accusing the Europeans of driving him to suicide, then saying the burial will be “like a dog.” A messenger shouts “Shut up!” and the Commissioner orders the chief messenger to take down the body and bring the men to court. The messenger obeys. The Commissioner departs with a few soldiers, reflecting on his years of “civilising” Africa. He decides that attending to the undignified task of cutting down a hanged man would tarnish his reputation, and he will instead write about the episode in a book. He muses that the story of the man who killed a messenger and hanged himself will make an interesting paragraph, noting there is “so much else to include,” but he must cut detail. He has already chosen the title of his prospective book: The Pacification of the Primitive Tribes of the Lower Niger.