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Friday, 6 September 2013
Ituen and the King's Wife
Ituen was a young man of Calabar.
He was the only child of his parents,
and they were extremely fond of him,
as he was of fine proportions and very
good to look upon. They were poor
people, and when Ituen grew up and
became a man, he had very little
money indeed, in fact he had so little
food, that every day it was his custom
to go to the market carrying an empty
bag, into which he used to put
anything eatable he could find after
the market was over.
At this time Offiong was king. He
was an old man, but he had plenty of
wives. One of these women, named
Attem, was quite young and very good-
looking. She did not like her old
husband, but wished for a young and
handsome husband. She therefore told
her servant to go round the town and
the market to try and find such a man
and to bring him at night by the side
door to her house, and she herself
would let him in, and would take care
that her husband did not discover
him.
That day the servant went all round
the town, but failed to find any young
man good-looking enough. She was just
returning to report her ill-success
when, on passing through the market-
place, she saw Ituen picking up the
remains of corn and other things which
had been left on the ground. She was
immediately struck with his fine
appearance and strength, and saw that
he was just the man to make a proper
lover for her mistress, so she went up
to him, and said that the queen had
sent for him, as she was so taken with
his good looks. At first Ituen was
frightened and refused to go, as he
knew that if the King discovered him
he would be killed. However, after
much persuasion he consented, and
agreed to go to the queen's side door
when it was dark.
When night came he went with
great fear and trembling, and knocked
very softly at the queen's door. The
door was opened at once by the queen
herself, who was dressed in all her
best clothes, and had many necklaces,
beads, and anklets on. Directly she saw
Ituen she fell in love with him at once,
and praised his good looks and his
shapely limbs. She then told her
servant to bring water and clothes,
and after he had had a good wash and
put on a clean cloth, he rejoined the
queen. She hid him in her house all
the night.
In the morning when he wished to
go she would not let him, but, although
it was very dangerous, she hid him in
the house, and secretly conveyed food
and clothes to him. Ituen stayed there
for two weeks, and then he said that it
was time for him to go and see his
mother, but the queen persuaded him
to stay another week, much against his
will.
When the time came for him to
depart, the queen got together fifty
carriers with presents for Ituen's
mother who, she knew, was a poor
woman. Ten slaves carried three
hundred rods; the other forty carried
yams, pepper, salt, tobacco, and cloth.
When all the presents arrived Ituen's
mother was very pleased and
embraced her son, and noticed with
pleasure that he was looking well, and
was dressed in much finer clothes than
usual; but when she heard that he had
attracted the queen's attention she was
frightened, as she knew the penalty
imposed on any one who attracted the
attention of one of the king's wives.
Ituen stayed for a month in his
parents' house and worked on the
farm; but the queen could not be
without her lover any longer, so she
sent for him to go to her at once. Ituen
went again, and, as before, arrived at
night, when the queen was delighted
to see him again.
In the middle of the night some of
the king's servants, who had been told
the story by the slaves who had carried
the presents to Ituen's mother, came
into the queen's room and surprised
her there with Ituen. They hastened to
the king, and told him what they had
seen. Ituen was then made a prisoner,
and the king sent out to all his people
to attend at the palaver house to hear
the case tried. He also ordered eight
Egbos to attend armed with machetes.
When the case was tried Ituen was
found guilty, and the king told the
eight Egbo men to take him into the
bush and deal with him according to
native custom. The Egbos then took
Ituen into the bush and tied him up to
a tree; then with a sharp knife they cut
off his lower jaw, and carried it to the
king.
When the queen heard the fate of
her lover she was very sad, and cried
for three days. This made the king
angry, so he told the Egbos to deal
with his wife and her servant
according to their law. They took the
queen and the servant into the bush,
where Ituen was still tied up to the
tree dying and in great pain. Then, as
the queen had nothing to say in her
defence, they tied her and the girl up
to different trees, and cut the queen's
lower jaw off in the same way as they
had her lover's. The Egbos then put
out both the eyes of the servant, and
left all three to die of starvation. The
king then made an Egbo law that for
the future no one belonging to Ituen's
family was to go into the market on
market day, and that no one was to
pick up the rubbish in the market. The
king made an exception to the law in
favour of the vulture and the dog, who
were not considered very fine people,
and would not be likely to run off with
one of the king's wives, and that is why
you still find vultures and dogs doing
scavenger in the market-places even at
the present time.
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