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The
Second ComingWilliam Butler Yeats 1920-21
(Refers to the promised return of Christ on Doomsday, the
end of the world.)
Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the center cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
This
first part of Yeats' poem expresses his personal feelings
about the "dissolution of the civilization of his time,
the end of one cycle of history and the approach of another."
At the time, Yeats felt that Western civilization was starting
to collapse and that a new cycle of savagery was about to
begin (Russian Revolution, rise of Fascism).
Things
Fall Apart
Chinua
Achebe was born in Nigeria in 1930, the son of a teacher in
a missionary school. After graduating from college, Achebe
taught in Nigerian Universities, co-founded a publishing company,
and was a faculty member at the University of Massachusetts
(Amherst), the University of Connecticut, and Bard College.
Things
Fall Apart was Achebe's first novel, published in 1958.
He wrote two sequels to the book (featuring descendants of
Okonkwo, the main character of Things Fall Apart):
No Longer at Ease (1960), and The Arrow of God
(1964). He has written several other novels (among them, Anthills
of the Savanna (short listed for The Booker Prize),
a volume of short stories, and many essays and poems. His
works describe "the effects of Western customs and values
on traditional African society," and are the most translated
of any writer of Black heritage in the world. Scholars and
critics from thirteen countries of African life and literature,
selected him as the writer of the best book written in the
twentieth century, regarding Africa.
Achebe
represents the social conscience of millions of people, a
"cultural custodian," a man of "rock-ribbed
principles." His universal and globalistic thinking necessarily
allows his works to be beautifully transcendental. Achebe
shows a true and clear understanding of mankind's high morals,
as well as its extreme shortcomings. These works have appealed
to, and resonated with, millions of readers the world overfor
more than forty-five years.
The
protagonist of Things Fall Apart, the Nigerian warrior
Okonkwo, suffered from the fatal flaw of a complete lack of
femininity. This gentleness and softness, with all of its
positive implications, had been totally found wanting in his
character all of his life, and, as a result, he was wholly
emotionally unbalanced. It is this lack of a feminine sidean
implacable inflexibility and immovable rigiditythat
led to his ultimate downfall.
Achebe
used Yeats' poem The Second Coming as a type of prologue
(". . . the worst [of men] are full of passionate intensity").
This phrase can certainly be applied to Okonkwo, and the British
colonizers as well.
Okonkwo,
"tall and huge," was one of the most successful
warrior-leaders in his tribe. At the age of eighteen he had
become wrestling champion of the land, a feat still talked
of with awe some twenty years later. He was one of the most
prosperous men in his clan through dint of hard work, and
was one of its ruling elders. However, his emotional make-up
was such that the reader can actually track the progress of
his breakdown from his early childhood on.
Unoka,
Okonkwo's father, was a lazy and improvident man who died
heavily in debt, leaving his son to care for the remaining
family members as best he could. All of his remaining years
Okonkwo was to carry the shame and embarrassment created by
this weak and worthless drinker. It was fortunate that in
the Ibo tribe a man was judged solely on his own merits and
not on those of an ancestor. What a man could make of himself
was what counted. Okonkwo had two barns of yams, two titles,
three wives who each had an obi (large living quarters) complete
with attached hen-house, and, of course, several children.
Okonkwo's deep fear of failure and weakness, however, was
to haunt him until his end: "It was deeper and more intimate
that the fear of evil and capricious gods and of magic, the
fear of the forest, and of the forces of nature . . ."
(16-17).
Okonkwo's
father Unoka did have some good qualities and those were the
ones that Okonkwo should have possessed but did not. His father
was an ardent lover of nature: "He loved this season
of the year, when the rains had stopped and the sun rose every
morning with dazzling beauty" (8). "He loved the
first kites . . . and the children who sang songs of welcome
. . ." (9) ". . . . And his happiest moments were
. . . when the village musicians brought down their instruments
. . . Unoka would play with them, his face beaming with blessedness
and peace" (8). Okonkwo had learned to "hate everything
that his father Unoka had loved . . . one of the things was
gentleness . . . (17).
Unfortunately
for him, he refused to embrace any of these caring, feminine
qualities.
Although
the Ibo tribe regarded conversation as a high art, Okonkwo
was never happy simply sitting and talking; he was not a man
of thought, but of action, who felt much more comfortable
working (38). He also had a stammer which frustrated him so
that he would use his fists as a substitute for reasonable
words.
Okonkwo
considered showing affection to be a "sign of weakness"
(30), so he kept any positive emotions to himself. Although
inwardly pleased at his young son Nwoye's development (51)
he kept it bottled up. (Although note his later rage at the
mature Nwoye's actions.) Inwardly he knew his sons were too
young to completely understand the intricacies of yam planting
(34) and he never "showed any emotion openly unless it
be the emotion of anger" (30). Okonkwo's desire for "conquering
and subduing" is equated with the physical desire for
a woman, and he stated that if a man "was unable to rule
his woman and his children he was not really a man" (52).
He regarded Nwoye as having "too much of his mother in
him," and insisted that he listen to only "masculine
stories of violence and bloodshed," instead of the folktales
of his mother, that Nwoye much preferred.
Okonkwo
did show a bit of humanity when his favorite daughter was
desperately ill ("he had become gravely worried")
(106), and also when she was carried off by the Oracle; but
this was because he had always wished that she had been a
boy, and because he was so disappointed in his "degenerate"
and "effeminate" son, Nwoye (143).
Okonkwo
had survived the hard early years of young adulthood by his
"inflexible will," but it is this self-same will
that was to undo him in the end. He mistook flexibility and
compromise for weakness and indecisiveness. Total masculinity
in his mind meant total success. Other tribal leaders, however,
did not by any means go along with this thinking and there
are many examples in the text that show within the framework
of his tribe's customs, many of Okonkwo's actions ran counter
to them. When he beat one of his wives during "peace
week," a taboo action, he was brought to task for it,
and, although, again inwardly repentant, "he was not
the man to go about telling his neighbors that he was in error"
(32). We see, in another instance, that the village judges
decided in a woman's favor and even threatened her husband
with castration if he should seek retribution (88).
When Okonkwo rudely told a fellow tribesman that "this
meeting is for men," he was chastised by the others (28).
He also went against tribal wisdom when he accompanied the
group who led his "foster" son Ikemefuna to his
death in the forest. The elder Ezeuda had previously warned
him not to have anything to do with the boy's death (55).
To make matters worse, Okonkwo, out of fear of appearing weak,
delivered the second machete blow, the coup de grâce,
and was roundly criticized by his friend and peer Obierika:
"If I were you I would have stayed at home . . . nor
be the one to do it" (64, 65).
At
the revered elder Ezeudu's funeral, Okonkwo very carelessly
allowed his gun to go off, killing the dead man's young son.
Although this was considered an "inadvertent" or
"female" crime, the clan laws stated that Okonkwo
and family must be exiled to his mother's land for seven years.
Okonkwo's
uncle summarized the tribe's view of womanhood, and it is
here that the reader readily sees the crystallization of tribal
thought. Uchendu presents a woman as supreme ("Mother
is Supreme"), to be regarded as a safe haven; offering
warmth and sympathy and protection in a harsh world; as a
rejuvenator. Even after being exiled and after his return,
Okonkwo still did not understand this necessary concept, this
essential ingredient in balancing man's nature.
The
greatest example of Okonkwo's obstinacy was when he refused
to accept, however reluctantly, the presence of the white
men and their Christianity in his midst. The other elders
had gradually realized that they must compromise in order
to survive; adaptability is the key to survival. They felt
that the "usefulness of the whole" (the community)
was of paramount importance. They would gain nothing by resisting.
Once again, Okonkwo's rigidity and unthinking rage were responsible
for his ultimate undoing. He knew his peers were not going
to fight against the District Commissioner's troops and yet
he would not bend.
The
first missionary, the Englishman Mr. Brown, offered "compromise
and accommodation" (109). The second missionary, the
inflexible Mr. Smith (like Okonkwo) precipitated the final
confrontation. It is also ironic that Okonkwo's son Nwoye
found "poetry" in this new "soft" religion
of Christianity and became a fervent disciple. He found in
this new religion all that was lacking in his father.
Further
irony is seen in the fact that, due to Okonkwo's complete
rejection of any feminine attributes, he felt he was forced
to commit suicide, which was taboo.
Let
it be noted that Great Britain, which colonized Nigeria, had
been ruled by a woman for the past sixty yearsa queen
whom many considered to be the greatest leader England had
ever had. Certainly Queen Victoria presided over the most
incredible economic expansion ever witnessed up to that time.
(Not forgetting Queen Elizabeth I, who, in effect, had started
English colonialism.) It also must be noted here that African
tribes had been forcibly colonized by various European powers
for many years, before this story takes place (1890). All
factions of the colonists (political, business, religious,
and, of course, military) arbitrarily sought expansionism
for their own ends, not taking into account any individual
clans' or nations' religious or social and cultural mores,
but summarily dismissing same, in order to impose Western
rules and regulations which they thought were far superior.
These imperialists also carved up lands, shifted borders,
and moved old established boundaries, on other continents,
in a completely arbitrary manner without consulting those
countries' leaders. (The U.S. is not immune to criticism,
case in point: Hawaii, and potentially, Iraq.)
Getting
back to Yeats; this time to the last two lines, (which might
well be considered today as ominous foreshadowing):
"And
what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?"
Looking
at the present political/military world situation, it would
be a good idea if more male leaders would allow their feminine
sides to come to the fore, and that more women of the world
be in position of leadership, so that patience and reason
could be balanced fairly against mindless passion. Then global
confrontations, which would inevitably lead to irreparable
damage too catastrophic to imagine, could be avoided and the
world could then live in peace.
Chinua
Achebe certainly knew what he was talking about when he related
to his readers the song that the Ibo tribe sings whenever
a woman dies:
"For
whom is it well, for whom is it well?
There is no one for whom it is well" (125).
Pax
Vobiscum.
Deus miseratur.
Bibliography
Achebe, Chinua. Things Fall Apart. 5th printing. New
York: Fawcett Crest Books (published by Ballantine Books)
December 1984.
The Norton Anthology of English Literature. 3rd ed.
New York: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 1975.
http://www.achebebooks.com
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