Because I Am A Poet-Drama



SCENE THREE [THE KING’S PALACE]

OLOWO. My king who is always taller, when on the throne and on our mortal ground. The Iroko tree is an exaggeration when your height is to be praised, I raise you to the sky my king.

KING ABAYOMI. Olowo, your tongue is the bee comb that gathers sweetness
of stings. Let me die by your tongue great farmer, good man. What brings you to my palace with, the visitor and the daughter of that lion Dele? I know why but I must ask and follow the tradition of ignorance.

OLOWO. My king I am waiting for my older brother to get here, I know now why you asked a question you already know the answer to. It will benefit the hearing of my older brother Dele. Your wisdom has born another fruit my wise king.

SAMSON. Olowo, I’ve sent a message to the mommoh the town crier to awaken the hearing of their attention and that of the council of elders.

OLOWO. Samson, you have done well. The council of elders is almost complete, but I wonder who is to stand for that young man with the confusing words? Is it the NISE?

SAMSON. It is NYSC not NISE. He has shown he is a man when he belly your niece with child. I think he can stand for himself. Sometimes I wonder if it is his words that are confusing or it is our head that doesn’t understand his language.

OLOWO. Samson, please do not speak unwisely. We are inn the presence of the king.

SAMSON. Unwisely or I shouldn’t speak against custom and tradition in the presence of the king. How then must we forget the law that says we shouldn’t marry an outsider?

OLOWO. Here arrives Dele, please be unwise to the custom and tradition. I beg thee, do though heed me? [Whispering]

SAMSON. Most heedingly I hear you my good friend though against willingness.

ENTERS DELE SITS WITH OLOWO AND TOWN CRIER WITH FIVE COUNCIL MEMBERS

KING ABAYOMI. My wise council of elders, Dele the lion of our village welcome. This is a rare gathering since the war of ‘Iserin’ that you proved thy valiant strength. Today it is not war; your daughter has been impregnated by an outsider. He is the

DELE. What! [Stormed out violently from behind] Olowo, Is that true? Mama Shade so this is where you have been?

OLOWO. Hmmm.

MRS DELE. Hmmm [sobed bitterly]

DELE. Shade, is it true? [angrily]

Shade. Daddy I um uh. It is…

GUARDS. You do not speak when the king is speaking only your ears have the liberty to listen rightly! I will not warn you again.

DELE. Apologies my king.

KING ABAYOMI. My wise council what say you? Tunde, you’re the oldest and the interpreter of our laws, what does the law say about this.

Tunde. We should deliberate on this my wise king.

COUNCIL WHISPERS AMONGST THEMSELVES

FIRST MAN. Do not forget she’s the daughter of Dele, and also the unpronounced niece of the king though he denies it. The king has no heir so he told me to warn all about banishment that they should be married.

SECOND MAN. I don’t agree with banishment. They are to be married to let peace reign. That way the bloodline will not be lost.

THIRD MAN. Are we suspending the law that says banishment upon such taboo?

SECOND MAN. We are also suspending your banishment from this world by doing that.

THIRD MAN. It is your banishment, foolish man. You are afraid of your war mate.

SECOND MAN. Oh if you are not afraid of him why do you whisper it? Stand up tall with the ostrich feather on your chiefly red cap and pronounce the banishment If you dare.

THIRD MAN. That was not what I meant oh.

SECOND MAN. Dele, is not a dead warrior he only hasn’t proven his warrior hood because there’s no war. He single handedly defended our village from hundreds of Ijune VILLAGE.  O jare let them wed.

FOURTH MAN. I agree with him let them be married.

ALL. We vote for marriage too.

TUNDE. Marriage it is then.

KING ABAYOMI. What has my wise council decided?

TUNDE. We the council of uroko village has according to the interpretation of our custom decided that the young man should take Shade as his wife and assume full responsibility of the pregnancy.

KING ABAYOMI. Does anyone here in this gathering disagree with the judgment of the council?

MRS DELE. Oooohhh [cries]

KING ABAYOMI. No one. By the power bestowed upon me as the king of this village i pronounce that the words of the council is binding. Then it shall be that Shade and the student be married. [crowd murmurs amongst themselves this is impossible, this is not true]




To be continued…………………………

Thanks for reading…..  

Share this:

CONVERSATION

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

eheheh!...thrilling n hilarious___u rilli penned it well... I can't wait to c d poet's reaction...(my suspense is triggered)

Anonymous said...

I can't stop laughing, why didn't the poet and Shade make effort to convince them that there's no pregnancy? Laughs i can't wait to read another scene.