Gabriel Okara’s The Mystic Drum
Gabriel Okara’s The Mystic Drum
The
drum in African poetry, generally stands for the spiritual pulse of traditional
African life. The poet asserts that first, as the drum beat inside him, fishes
danced in the rivers and men and women danced on the land to the rhythm of the
drum. But standing behind the tree, there stood an outsider who smiled with an
air of indifference at the richness of their culture. However, the drum still
continued to beat rippling the air with quickened tempo compelling the dead to
dance and sing with their shadows. The ancestral glory overpowers other
considerations. So powerful is the mystic drum, that it brings back even the
dead alive. The rhythm of the drum is the aching for an ideal Nigerian State of
harmony. The outsider still continued to smile at the culture from the
distance.
The
outsider stands for Western Imperialism that has looked down upon anything
Eastern, non-Western, alien and therefore, ‘incomprehensible for their own
good’ as ‘The Other’. The African culture is so much in tune with nature that
the mystic drum invokes the sun, the moon, the river gods and the trees began
to dance. The gap finally gets bridged between humanity and nature, the animal
world and human world, the hydrosphere and lithosphere that fishes turned men,
and men became fishes. But later as the mystic drum stopped beating, men became
men, and fishes became fishes. Life now became dry, logical and mechanical
thanks to Western Scientific Imperialism and everything found its place. Leaves
started sprouting on the woman; she started to flourish on the land. Gradually
her roots struck the ground. Spreading a kind of parched rationalism, smoke
issued from her lips and her lips parted in smile. The term ’smoke’ is also
suggestive of the pollution caused by industrialization, and also the clouding
of morals.. Ultimately, the speaker was left in ‘belching darkness’, completely
cut off from the heart of his culture, and he packed off the mystic drum not to
beat loudly anymore. The ‘belching darkness” alludes to the futility and
hollowness of the imposed existence.
The
outsider, at first, only has an objective role standing behind a tree.
Eventually, she intrudes and tries to weave their spiritual life. The ‘leaves
around her waist’ are very much suggestive of Eve who adorned the same after
losing her innocence. Leaves stop growing on the trees but only sprout on her
head 3 signifying ‘deforestation.” The refrain reminds us again and again, that
this Eve turns out to be the eve of Nigerian damnation.
Okara
mentions in one of his interviews that “The Mystic Drum” is essentially a love
poem: “This was a lady I loved. And she coyly was not responding directly, but
I adored her. Her demeanor seemed to mask her true feelings; at a distance, she
seemed adoring, however, on coming closer, she was, after all, not what she
seemed.” This lady may stand as an emblem that represents the lure of Western
life; how it seemed appealing at first but later came across as distasteful to
the poet.
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