Tusome

3 December 2013

Why the Hen Lives with man - Section the Last




“Tomorrow at the break of dawn, I will face the man courageously and request for some fiery coals for lighting up some fire.” The two immediately declared the idea effective. And true to her word, Hen entered man’s gate full of great faith the next day. And her believe paid off once she set foot on the grass thatched hut. The human being, (a woman) had been sifting chaff from some maize grains. And some remnants had of course fallen on the ground. And on seeing them, and imagining how hungry she was, Hen began pecking them with an appetite comparable to that of a starved ogre. The woman had welcomed Hen so warmly that the latter’s heart began envying the forest, in favour of the woman’s compound.
 Days came and passed swiftly. And hen was so satisfied with man’s hospitality that she made up her mind never to make a return to the problem-filled forest. Her friend the guinea fowl would think up a plan of survival. But was the hen not betraying the loyalty of her colleague? She had promised Guinea fowl that she would bring fire from the man’s hearth. That is why one evening she took wing to the top of the hut. With continuous, persistent flaps of her wings she sang to Guinea fowl, her mouth facing the direction of the forest.
Hen was a good thinker as well as a wise woman. She knew the saying of old; our ancestors for us as a whole and everybody to himself. One day while she and Guinea foul were sitting on a flat stone, she said; “My friend, I have cooked up an excellent plan which would unchain us from this natural slavery.” Guinea fowl laughed at the seriousness showing up in Hen’s face. “What is it, the eldest daughter of King Solomon?” she asked jokingly but at the same time burning with anxiety to hear of the plan. Hen was not in the mood of wasting her words, but she hit directly at the point.
                  
                        Te te te te ii oo,
                       Guinea fowl, my jungle friend,
                       Allow my words to settle into your ears,
                     Yes, guinea fowl
                      I say there is no fire.
                       No fire! No fire! No fire at all, my friend the guinea fowl!
The lyrics of the song echoed through the forest. Hen assumed that the song’s importance had successfully entered her friend’s mind and heart. So Hen was bewitched by the good life available in the woman’s hut. And that is why she lives with man to this very day. And day in, day out, she never fails to reassure her friend the Guinea fowl of the absence of fire in human land.
©2013 Peter Ngila