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Vi. The Passing Of 'ogun

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p. 46

Vi. The Passing Of Gun.

\"Arba continues:"

After the

bo Wars,

gun reigns An age passed by, and f knew no more

Of battles; for gun, grey and bent, chose out

The way of peace beloved of Old Armf.

"in peace."

Forgotten lives were lived, and shadowy priests

Kept warm the altars of the departed Gods:

Old men went softly to the River's lip1

Unsung: 'twixt hope and fear mute colonists

Went forth to the strange forests of the World;

And unremembered wives sought out the shrines

Of the givers of new life. Their names are lost...

Yet now, Obo, let a final tale

Be told; for, at the last, that silent age

Yields up the legend of its fall. In those

Last tranquil years the mothers blessed King gun

For peaceful days and night's security;

And old men used to tell of their brave deeds

In battles where Ornyan led, applaud

The torch-lit dance and pass their last calm days

Happily... But then came traders from the wilds

p. 47

By thorn and tangle of scarce-trodden ways

Through the dim woods with wondrous tales they heard

At crossway markets1 in far lands of deeds

Ornyan did on battlefields beyond

The region of the forests. These tales, oft-told

In house and market, filled the air with rumours

And dreams of war which troubled the repose

Of ancient f--for, while the fathers feared

The coming of the day when the grey God,

Aweary of Earth's Kingship, would go back

To his first far-off home, the young men's dreams

Were always of Ornyan, and their pale days

Ornyan

returns

from

distant

Wars to

demand the

crown.
Lagged by... Such were the various thoughts of men

In f, when on a clay, unheralded,

Ornyan2 with a host appeared before

Her peaceful gates. None could deny his entrance:

The hero strode again the streets he saved

From the Olbo's grass-clad men, and came

Before his father to demand the crown

Of Odudwa. King gun spoke: "My son,

p. 48

'Tis long since you were here, and you are welcome.

But why with these armed men do you recall

Times well-forgotten and the ancient wars?

This is a land of peace: beneath the shade

Of f's trees the mirth of Heaven's vales

Has found a home, the chorus and the dance

Their measure. Lay by your arms, and may no hurt

Attend your coming or your restful hours!"

Harshly Ornyan answered his old father:

"You speak of peace, Great gun, and the calm

Armf destined for a World to be.

Armf spoke--and Odudwa's dream

Of wisdom linked to supreme power begat

A theft!1 And that same night on Heaven's rim

Devised another destiny for men.

What Heaven-sent art has gun to undo

That deed, and bid the still-born live? Besides,

Who taught the peaceful peoples of the World

Their longing for red War? Who forged their weapons--

With steel Armf gave for harvesting?

Who slew young maids who would not wed to bear

p. 49

More sons for ancient wars? Who, pray, but gun,

The God of War?.. What then? 'Tis said: 'The field

The father sowed his son shall reap!'"1 And gun

Made answer: "The story of my life has been

As the succeeding seasons in the course

Where shun pours her stream. First, long ago,

The sunny months of heaven when I roamed

A careless boy upon the mountains; then,

As a whole season when the boisterous storms

Fill full the crag-strewn bed with racing waters,

And the warm Sun is hidden by the clouds,

Doom brought me journeys, toils in darkness, wars

And yet more wars. Again the barren months

Are here: the wagtail lights upon the rock

The river hid; a lazy trickle moves

And in my age Armf's promised peace

Gives back her stolen happiness to f....

And now, the sage Osnyi2 is no more,

His charms forgotten: I cannot turn to stone

And vanish like Odwa; I cannot cast

p. 50

My worn old body down to rise instead

A river of the land, as shun did.

No, Earth must hold me, glad or desolate,

A King or outcast in the vague forest,

Till Heaven call me--when the locked pools bask,

And shun sleeps... Till then I ask to be

In peace; and, with my tale of days accomplished,

My last arts taught, Armf's bidding done--

I, the lone God on Earth who knows fair Heaven,

And the calm life the Father bade us give

To men,--I, gun, will make way, and go

Upon the road I came." But Ornyan said:

"Let the first Mistress of the World decide.

These years the kingly power has passed away

From the old sleeping town Odwa built

To me, Ornyan, battling in far lands

Where no voice spoke of f. Let f choose

Her way: obscurity or wide renown!"

A silence fell: the black clouds of the storm

Were overhanging human destiny;

The breathless pause before the loud wind's blast

Held all men speechless--though they seemed to heave

The old

men desire

gun to

remain;

p. 51

For utterance. At length, Elffon, the friend

Of gun, voiced the fond hopes of the old chiefs

Who feared Ornyan and his coming day:

"Ours is the city of the shrines which guard

The spirits of the Gods, and all our ways

Are ordered by the Presences which haunt

The sacred precincts. The noise of war and tumult

Is far from those who dream beneath the trees

Of f. There is another way of life:

The way of colonists. By God's command,

From this first breast the infant nations stray

To the utter marches of humanity.

Let them press onward, and let Ornyan lead them

Till the far corners of the World be filled;

Let the unruly fall before their sword

Until the Law prevail. But let not f

Swerve from the cool road of her destiny

For dreams of conquest; and let not gun leave

The roof, the evening firelight and the ways

Of men--to go forth to the naked woods."

And the old chiefs echoed: "Live with us yet, Oh, gun!

Reign on your stable throne.
" But murmurs rose

but the

young men

acclaim

Ornyan.

p. 52

From the young men--suppressed at first, then louder--

Until their leader, gaining courage, cried:

"Empty our life has been--while from far plains,

Vibrant with the romance, the living lustre,

Ornyan's name bestows, great rumours came

To mock our laggard seasons; and each year

Mrimi's festival recalls alike

The hero's name and f's greatness. Must

All f slumber that the old may drowse?

No; we will have Ornyan, and no other,

To be our King." And a loud cry went up

From his followers: "Ornyan is our King!"

And in that cry King gun heard the doom

A chieftain of our day sees clear in eggs1

Of fateful parrots in his inmost chamber:

The walls of his proud city (his old defence)

Can never more uphold a rule of iron

For victor treachery within. And wearily

He spoke his last sad words: "My boyhood scarce

Had ended on Armf's happy hills

p. 53

When I came here with Odudwa; with him,

Lovingly I watched this ancient city growing,

And planted the grand forests for a robe

For queenly f. I have grown old with f:

Sometimes I feel that gun did become

f, and f gun, with the still lapse

gun goes

away.
Of years. Yet she rejects me. Ah! my trees

Would be more kind, and to my trees I go."

Dawn came; and gun stood upon a hill

To Westward, and turned to take a last farewell

Of his old queen of cities--but white and dense.

O'er harbouring woods and unremembering f

A mist was laid and blotted all.. Beyond,

As islands from a morning sea, arose

Two lone grey hills; and gun dreamed he saw

Again those early days, an age gone by,

When he and Great Odwa watched the Bird

Found those grand hills with magic sand,--bare slopes,

Yet born to smile... That vision paled: red-gold

Above grey clouds the Sun of yesterday

Climbed up--to shine on a new order.. So passed

Old gun from the land.

Next

Footnotes


p. 46

1
The River which separates this World from the next.

p. 47

1
Markets are often found at crossroads in the forest.

2 See Note X. on gun and Ornyan.

p. 48

1
The theft of Orsha's bag.

p. 49

1
Yoruba saying.

2 Osnyi made the charms which enabled the Gods to transform.

p. 52

1 A
gift of parrot's eggs to a Yoruba chief is an intimation that he has reigned long enough and that, should he die by his own hand, trouble would be saved.
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