Damola Awoyokun, a former Associate Editor of Glendora Review, former Managing Editor of Farafina Online, lives in Ibadan. Farafina Online Dear Doktor Professor Heidegger, I should like to know what you mean by the expression "The Fall into the Quotidian." When did this fall occur? Where were we standing when it happened? - Herzog by Saul Bellow.
If
Like Saleem the protagonist in Rushdie’s Midnight Children: ‘I had been mysteriously handcuffed to history, my destinies indissolubly chained to those of my country. For the next three decades, there was to be no escape.’ Whenever history is being made or unmade in tells us why.
Being the heftiest of his offerings so far, Set Forth, is enough to bring to quiet all the critics who dismissed Kayode Fayemi’s memoir, Out of the Shadows: exile and the struggle for freedom & democracy in
Who else except he who is from the gods could toss such grandiloquent self-referrals and ego roars like: “Akara Ogun”, “African Prince”, “one-third continental symbolism”, “Olori-Kunkun and Ori Olokun”, “You can leave your heart with Wole and travel to
Set Forth is written with a sustained accent on coming home; in fact opening and closing with it. But it is not to his triumphant coming back to
A disfavour the memoirist is doing for the Yoruba civilization is to ‘wisely give up’ his project to translate the remaining classic works of the Yoruba novelist D.O. Fagunwa having done A Forest of Thousand Daemons. Only him, as of now, has the resources to exactly translate the rest of Fagunwa with his taxing density of Yoruba dictions.
The life achievements of Soyinka as a creative energy and social restlessness taut with purpose are not a deterministic outcome of the gods’ spell; there was an existential effort on his own part, and that is the most important. At age three, for instance, when his mates are rightfully being kids at home, he forced himself on primary school one morning. He was so impatient with childhood. Such precocity, such impatience with the status quo, such endless curiosity and energy and countless enthusiasms drive this 50-year span autobiography. Deconstructing the title says it all. It’s a charge from a poem in Idanre his first anthology: Traveller, you must set forth at dawn i.e., in life if you want to succeed, to go very far which is what travelling means, you must set forth at dawn.
What is more, dawn is the interface between night (the past) and morning (the future). Wole Soyinka had set forth into the future when others were still in the night sleeping. Hence he becomes the first to see light ahead and leave darkness behind. At that sublime period, the memoir adds, ‘you owed the road and all that lay revealed along its rises and plunges, its contortions, and its arrow directness on both flatland and crest that sometimes appeared aimed at the horizon shimmering at the very edge of the world.’ And the road which he has possessed, is a ‘magic lantern’ with ‘infinite resources.’ No doubt in 1986 he became the first African to conquer the Nobel Prize for literature, and at a relatively young age of 52. About 40 years before then was when Albert Camus the French writer and philosopher got the prize at a young age of 44!
Disappointingly however, Soyinka devotes more recollection –which is the tyranny of selection and expression- to his politics, very little to his artistic endeavours. How gracious would it be had he offered space to the inspirations, the origins of many of his great books.
Also, Soyinka is a professor without any postgraduate degree, how he was able to beat the rules of the academic game are missing. Soyinka is a great chess player. Almost a master. In
Actively, Soyinka read Nietzsche and allowed himself to be influenced by him. Both men share an affair with Greek mythology and did works on it. In fact Nietzsche’s influence is robust in the seminal Fourth Stage and some of his moral codes. How and when Soyinka came to the admiration of this German eccentric of Zarathustra, ubermasch- superman are not captured in the memoir. But he sprinkles some fringe benefits: a delectable tale of a White African Mother, a precursor to Bob Geodolf and Bono of the Live Aid for
Like Orunmila’s divine system of Ifa and Jesus Christ’s relentless use of parables, Soyinka believes events and their narration must make sense beyond themselves, and must speak for and to a larger truth. Set Forth recounts the 1985 coup in Dodan barracks,
The stress upon the intimacy between thematic content and the embodying form in this work enlarges the importance of the dialectics of history in informing or defining the present and hence the future, and moreover confirms Soyinka as a superb prose stylist. The author does not take up any issue or theme without allocating prose plus its form to describe the surroundings as a partaker in the action or foregrounding the theme in history or mythology. It takes intelligence and imaginative power.
The harsh registers of criticism he reserves for the development mess, the landscape disaster, the social nightmare called
The richly poetic prose with which the author-protagonist opens the book has a cadence with an intensity that is almost hypnotic. Why not? On a long boring flight back to
By and large Soyinka sounds so valedictory as if he is using the book to address his gods like
The tile of the book itself is taken from a poem titled Death at Dawn and so once the book begins, it trickles death throughout: that of Ojetunji Aboyade, Femi Johnson, Obafemi Awolowo (whose year of death was recorded as 1984 instead of 1987 in the American edition), Fela, Kudirat, MKO, Ken Saro Wiwa, Abacha, Ibrahim Alfa, of the Hutus and Tutsis and those protesters fell by the anti-June12 bullets in Nigeria and those of ANC and Buthelezi in South Africa immediately after Mandela’s release.
Finally, in