ILE OKANRAN
OMO CORNER
   {CHILDRENS CORNER}
The Tortoise with a Pretty Daughter
THERE was once a king who was   very powerful. He had great influence over the wild beasts and animals. Now   the tortoise was looked upon as the wisest of all beasts and men. This king   had a son named Ekpenyon, to whom he gave fifty young girls as wives, but the   prince did not like any of them. The king was very angry at this, and made a   law that if any man had a daughter who was finer than the prince's wives, and   who found favour in his son's eyes, the girl herself and her father and   mother should be killed.
Now about this time the   tortoise and his wife had a daughter who was very beautiful. The mother   thought it was not safe to keep such a fine child, as the prince might fall   in love with her, so she told her husband that her daughter ought to be   killed and thrown away into the bush. The tortoise, however, was unwilling,   and hid her until she was three years old. One day, when both the tortoise   and his wife were away on their farm, the king's son happened to be hunting   near their house, and saw a bird perched on the top of the fence round the   house. The bird was watching the little girl, and was so entranced with her   beauty that he did not notice the prince coming. The prince shot the bird   with his bow and arrow, and it dropped inside the fence, so the prince sent   his servant to gather it. While the servant was looking for the bird he came   across the little girl, and was so struck with her form, that he immediately   returned to his master and told him what he had seen. The prince then broke   down the fence and found the child, and fell in love with her at once. He stayed   and talked with her for a long time, until at last she agreed to become his   wife. He then went home, but concealed from his father the fact that he had   fallen in love with the beautiful daughter of the tortoise.
But the next morning he sent   for the treasurer, and got sixty pieces of cloth[1] and three hundred   rods,[2] and sent them to the tortoise. Then in the early afternoon he went   down to the tortoise's house, and told him that he wished to marry his   daughter. The tortoise saw at once that what he had dreaded had come to pass,   and that his life was in danger, so he told the prince that if the king knew,   he would kill not only himself (the tortoise), but also his wife and   daughter. The prince replied that he would be killed himself before he   allowed
[1. A piece of cloth is   generally about 8 yards long by 1 yard broad, and is valued at 5s.
2. A rod is made of brass, and   is worth 3d. It is in the shape of a narrow croquet hoop, about 16 inches   long and 6 inches across. A rod is native currency on the Cross River.]
the tortoise and his wife and   daughter to be killed. Eventually, after much argument, the tortoise   consented, and agreed to hand his daughter to the prince as his wife when she   arrived at the proper age. Then the prince went home and told his mother what   he had done. She was in great distress at the thought that she would lose her   son, of whom she was very proud, as she knew that when the king heard of his   son's disobedience he would kill him. However, the queen, although she knew   how angry her husband would be, wanted her son to marry the girl he had   fallen in love with, so she went to the tortoise and gave him some money,   clothes, yams, and palm-oil as further dowry on her son's behalf in order   that the tortoise should not give his daughter to another man. For the next   five years the prince was constantly with the tortoise's daughter, whose name   was Adet, and when she was about to be put in the fatting house,[1] the   prince told his father that he was going to take Adet as his wife. On hearing   this the king was very angry, and sent word all round his kingdom that all   people should come on a certain day to the marketplace to hear the palaver.   When the appointed day arrived the market-place was quite full of people, and   the stones belonging to the king and queen were placed in the middle of the   market-place.
When the king and queen arrived   all the people stood up and greeted them, and they then sat down on their   stones. The king then told his attendants
[1. The fatting house is a room   where a girl is kept for some weeks previous to her marriage. She is given   plenty of food, and made as fat as possible, as fatness is looked upon as a   great beauty by the Efik people.]
to bring the girl Adet before   him. When she arrived the king was quite astonished at her beauty. He then   told the people that he had sent for them to tell them that he was angry with   his son for disobeying him and taking Adet as his wife without his knowledge,   but that now he had seen her himself he had to acknowledge that she was very beautiful,   and that his son had made a good choice. He would therefore forgive his son.
When the people saw the girl   they agreed that she was very fine and quite worthy of being the prince's   wife, and begged the king to cancel the law he had made altogether, and the   king agreed and as the law had been made under the "Egbo" law, he   sent for eight Egbos,[1] and told them that the order was cancelled   throughout his kingdom, and that for the future no one would be killed who   had a daughter more beautiful than the prince's wives, and gave the Egbos   palm wine and money to remove the law, and
[1. The Egbo Society has many   branches, extending from Calabar up the Cross River as far as the German   Cameroons. Formerly this society used to levy blackmail to a certain extent   and collect debts for people. The head Ju Ju, or fetish man, of each society   is disguised, and frequently wears a hideous mask. There is a bell tied round   his waist, hanging behind and concealed by feathers; this bell makes a noise   as be runs. When the Egbo is out no women are allowed outside their houses,   and even at the present time the women pretend to be very frightened. The   Egbo very often carries a whip in his hand, and hits out blindly at any one   he comes across. He runs round the town, followed by young men of his society   beating drums and firing off guns. There is generally much drinking going on   when the Egbo is playing. There is an Egbo House in most towns, the end part   of which is screened off for the Egbo to change in. Inside the house are hung   human skulls and the skulls of buffalo, or bush cow, as they are called; also   heads of the various antelopes, crocodiles, apes, and other animals which   have been killed by the members. The skulls of cows and goats killed by the   society are also hung up. A fire is always kept in the Egbo House; and in the   morning and late afternoon, the members of the society frequently meet there   to drink gin and palm wine.]
sent them away. Then he   declared that the tortoise's daughter, Adet, should marry his son, and he   made them marry the same day. A great feast was then given which lasted for   fifty days, and the king killed five cows and gave all the people plenty of   foo-foo[1] and palm-oil chop, and placed a large number of pots of palm wine   in the streets for the people to drink as they liked. The women brought a big   play to the king's compound, and there was singing and dancing kept up day   and night during the whole time. The prince and his companions also played in   the market square. When the feast was over the king gave half of his kingdom   to the tortoise to rule over, and three hundred slaves to work on his farm.   The prince also gave his father-in-law two hundred women and one hundred   girls to work for him, so the tortoise became one of the richest men in the kingdom.   The prince and his wife lived together for a good many years until the king   died, when the prince ruled in his place. And all this shows that the   tortoise is the wisest of all men and animals.
MORAL.--Always have pretty   daughters, as no matter how poor they may be, there is always the chance that   the king's son may fall in love with them, and they may thus become members   of the royal house and obtain much wealth.
[1. Foo-foo =yams boiled and mashed   up.]
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