EBOPP, the LEMUR, and MBAW, the dormouse, were making a tour in the bush. They looked for a good place to make a farm. When they found one, they cut down the trees and took two days to clear enough ground. After this, they went back to the town where the other animals lived.
The next morning Ebopp said, “Let us go to our new farms and build a small house.”
They did. Ebopp made his, and Mbaw his.
Now, before a new town is begun, a little shed called ekpa ntan is always made where the Egbo house is to stand. Ebopp and Mbaw accordingly set to work and built an ekpa ntan. Then they went back to their old town and rested for two days.
On the third day they went to work again. Ebopp worked on his farm, Mbaw on his. That night they slept in the huts they had built and at dawn started to work once more. When night came, Ebopp lighted a lamp and said:
“I do not want to sleep here. If we sleep here we shall sleep hungry. Let us go back to our old town.”
When they got there their wives cooked for them. Ebopp said to Mbaw, “Come and join together with me in eating.” So his friend came and ate with him.
Afterwards Mbaw said, “Let us now go to my house and have food there too.” So they went tither.
After they had eaten all that Mbaw had cooked, Ebopp went home.
The next morning he went to call for his friend and said, “Go and get young plantains to plant on the farm.” Both of them collected a great basketful and went to the place where the new farms were – Ebopp to his, and Mbaw to his. They worked hard.
At midday, Ebopp said, “Let us rest a little while and eat the food we have brought.” To this Mbaw agreed, and after some time they set to work again.
About five o’clock Ebopp called, “Let us go back now to the old town, for it is very far off.”
So they left off working and went back, but before they could get there night fell.
The next morning they took more young plantains and, again, worked hard all day. When it was time to go back, Ebopp asked, “How many of the young plantains remain to be planted?”
Mbaw answered, “About forty.”
Whereupon Ebopp said, “Of mine also there remain about forty.”
At dawn, the next day, they went to their old farms to get some more plantain cuttings. Then they went back to the new farms and began planting.
As soon as Ebopp had finished, he said, “I have finished mine>”
To this Mbaw replied, “Mine also are finished.”
Ebopp said, “My work is done. I need come here only for the harvest.”
They they both went back to their old town and told their wives. “We have finished setting out the plantains. We hope that you will go and plant koko-yams tomorrow. Try, both of you, to get baskets full of koko-yams for the planting.”
To this the women agreed and, when they had collected as many as were necessary, they set out for the new farms.
When they arrived, Mbaw’s wife asked the wife of Ebopp, “Do you think we can finish planting all these today?”
Ebopp’s wife answered, “Yes, we can do it.”
All day they worked hard, and at night they went home and said, “We have finished planting all the koko-yams.”
Ebopp said, “Good, you have done well.”
Now the name of Ebopp’s wife was Akpan Anwan. She and her sister, Akandem, were the daughters of Obassi Osaw. When she got home she started to cook the evening meal for her husband. As soon as it was ready, she placed it upon the table, set water also in a cup, and laid spoons near by.
They were eating together when a slave named Umaw ran in. He had just come from the town of Obassi Osaw. He said, “I would speak to Ebopp alone.” When Akpan Anwan had left the room, the messenger said, “You are eating, but I bring you news that Akandem your sister-in-law is dead.”
Ebopp cried out aloud in his grief and sent a messenger to call his friend Mbaw.
As soon as the latter heard, he came running and said, “What can we do? We are planting new farms and beginning to build a new room. There is hardly any food to be got. How then can we properly hold the funeral customs?”
Ebopp said, “Nevertheless, I must try my best.”
When Umaw got ready to return, Ebopp said, “Say to Obassi Osaw, ‘Wait for me for six days, then I will surely come.”
The next morning he said to Mbaw, “Come now, let us do our utmost to collect what is necessary for the rites of my sister-in-law.”
They went through the town and bought all the food which they could find. Then Ebopp went back and said to his wife, “I did not wish to tell you before about the death of your sister, but today I must tell you. Make ready. In five days’ time I will take you to your father’s town to hold the funeral feast.”
Akpan Anwan was very grieved to hear of this and wept.
Ebopp said to Mbaw, “We must get palm wine for the feast, also rum for the libations. How can we get these? I have no money, and you also have none.
Mbaw said, “Go round among the town folks and see if any of them will lend you some.”
Ebopp said, “Good!” He then began to walk up and down, begging from all his friends, but none would give to him, although it was a big town. At last he went down to the place where they were making palm oil by the river. Quite nearby lived Iku, the water chevrotain. Ebopp told him his trouble and begged help, but Iku said, “I am very sorry you, but I have nothing to give.”
Ebopp was quite discouraged by now and, full of sorrow, turned to go away. When Iku saw this he said:
“Wait a minute, there is one thing I can do. You know that I have ‘four eyes.’ I will give you two of them, and with them you can buy all that you need.”
From out of his head he took the two eyes with which he had to see in the dark. They shone so brightly that Ebopp knew they were worth a great price. He took them home and showed them to his wife and his friend Mbaw.
The latter said, “From today you are freed from all anxiety. With those you can buy all that is needed.”
The next morning they gathered together all that had been collected, the plantains and the two shining eyes. Ebopp. Mbaw, and Akpan carried the loads between them. They set out for the dwelling place of Obassi Osaw.
When they arrived at the entrance of the town, Akpan Anwan began to weep bitterly. She threw down her burden and ran to the spot where her sister lay buried. Then he went back and got his wife’s load which she had left behind.
The townsfolk said to Ebopp, “You have come to keep your sister-in-law’s funeral customs today. Bring palm wine. Bring rum also for the libations, and let us hold the feast.”
Ebopp said, “I have brought nothing but plantains. All else that is necessary I mean to buy here.”
Now there was a famine in Obassi Osaw’s town, so Ebopp put all of his plantains in the Egbo House. The next day he sent a message to Obassi Osaw to bring his people. so that the food might be divided among them. Each man received one plantain.
Then Osaw said, “All that you have brought is eaten. Of you cannot give us more, you shall not take my daughter back with you to your country.”
Ebopp went to find his friend and told him what Obassi had said.
“Shall I see the two eyes?” he asked. “They are worth hundreds and hundreds of plantains and many pieces of cloth, but if I sell them now, the people are so hungry they will give a small price.”
Mbaw said, “Do not mind. See, I will teach you how to get more sense.
“You hold me one in your hand, and it is a big thing like a great shining stone; but if you put it in a mortar and grind it down, it will become, not one, but many stones, and some of the small pieces you can sell.”
This Ebopp did. He ground up the geat bright stones which had been Iku’s eyes until they become like shining sand.
Then Ebopp and Mbaw went and procured a black cap which they filled with the fragments.
Mbaw said, “Now go and look the town till you find someone who can sell what we need.”
Ebopp did so, and in the house of Effion Obassi he saw great stores hidden – food and palm wine, palm oil in jars, and run for the sacrifice.
Ebopp said to Effion, “If you will sell all this to me, I will give you in exchange something which will make all the town folk bow down before you.”
Effion said, “I will not sell all, but half of what I have I will sell you.”
So Ebopp said, “Very well. I will take what you give me, only do not open the thing I shall leave in exchange until I have returned to my own country. When you do open it, as I said before, all the town folk will bow down before you.”
So the funeral feast was prepared, and the people were satisfied.
When the rites were finished, Obassi said, “It is good. You can go away now with your wife.”
So Ebopp said to Mbaw and Akpan Anwan, “Come, let us go back to our own town. We must not sleep here tonight.”
When they had reached home once more, Ebopp sent a salve named Eder to Effion Obassi with the message:
“You may now open the cap. I have reached my town again.”
It was evening time, nut Effion at once called the townspeople together and said, “I have a thing here which is worth a great price.”
They cried, “Let us see it.”
He answered, “My thing is a very good thing, such as you have never seen before.
He brought the cap outside and opened it before them. All the shining things fell out. As they fell, a strange breeze came and caught them and blew them all over town. They lay on the road and on the floors of the compounds, each like a little star.
All the children came round and began picking them up. They gathered and gathered. In the daytime they could not see them, but every night they went out and sought for the shining things. All that they picked up they put in a box. At length many had been gathered together and they shone like a little sun in the box. At the end of about a month nearly all had been collected. They could not shut down the lid, however, because the box was too full, so when a great breeze came by it blew all the shining things about again. That is why sometimes we have a small moon and plenty of stars shining around it, while sometimes we have a big moon and hardly any stars are to be seen. The children take a month to fill the box again.
When the sparkles were scattered about the town, Effion sent a messeneger to Ebopp to ask: “Can you see the things shining from you town?”
At the time earth and sky were all joined together, like a house with an upstairs.
Ebopp went out and looked upward to the blue roof overhead. There he saw the small things sparkling in the darkness.
The next day he went to Iku and said, “Will you please do into a deep hole? I want to look at your eyes.”
Iku went inside the hole. Ebopp looked at his eyes. They were very bright, just like the sparkles which shone in the sky.
The cause of all the stars, therefore, is Enbopp, who took Iku’s eyes to Obassi’s town.
Iku’s eyes are like the stars.
The moon shines when all the fragments are gathered together. When it shine most brightly it it because the children have picked up nearly all the fragments and put them into the box.
[ EKOI ]
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