Hi guys.. Here I will tell you about The Reason Why The Crab Has A Shell, please read bellow!
The Reason Why The Crab Has A Shell
Once upon a time, there lived a woman
whose name was Aftermath. She had one daughter, whose name was Akuvi.
Her husband had died when the girl was still very young. As Akuvi grew
up she began to rebel against her mother’s authority. If Aftermath asked
her to fetch water she would refuse, if Aftermath asked her to pound
some yam, the girl would snarl and sulk. Mother used to curse her
daughter, but all to no avail. “You think I’m hard on you, she would
say, just wait if you keep behaving like this you’ll meet your fate one
day!” This went on for quite some time until one day the mother again
asked Akuvi to fetch some water from the well. Akuvi refused bluntly.
“Why do I always have to fetch your water, mother? Why can’t you get it
for yourself? You have arms and legs just like I do!” Aftermath got so
angry at her daughter’s insolence that she took a cane and beat her.
This, in turn, made Akuvi very angry. “that’s it! She said That’s it!
I’ve had enough, I’m going!” With that, she took some of her clothes,
packed them in a bundle and left home. She really had no idea where she
was going, she had nobody to turn to, she didn’t know anybody outside of
the small village they lived in.
As there was nowhere else to go she
headed towards the forest. After she’d been walking for some time, she
came to a small farm. On the edge stood an old hut, and outside the hut
sat an old lady. Akuvi had never seen such an old lady, she must be at
least a hundred years old! Akuvi walked up to the old lady, who looked
her in the eye, and asked: “Who are you and where are you from?” Akuvi
just about opened her mouth to answer, when the old lady shouted “Stop!
Don’t speak! I know all about you!” She wagged her crooked fingers at
the girl. “Your mother tried her best to bring you up well, but you
wouldn’t have it, would you? You thought you knew better. You wouldn’t
listen to your mother, well, now you’re here, you’ll see something else!
Welcome, my dear! ”
The old lady took her in, gave her some
food and a corner of her hut where she could lie down to sleep. The next
morning the old lady took Akuvi to her field, where she grew some
vegetables; yam, cassava, beans. The old lady spread her arms and said
to Akuvi: “what you see here is my farm, I grow everything here, and you
will have to help me. Every time I send you to pick something, these
plants will talk to you. Some will say: Don’t touch me please, I’m too
young, or: I’ve only just been planted, I’m not ripe yet! I want you to
ignore them don’t take any notice; just pick the one that protests
loudest.”
That same afternoon the old lady sent
the girl to the farm to pick some cassava and yam so that they could
pound some fufu for their supper. As she entered the field the plants
started talking to her. One of them said: Look, girl, I’m too old to be
here, and fed up being stuck here in this field, come and pick me!”
Another said: “Please don’t pick me, I’ve just been planted! Go to the
next one!” With all these voices coming at her from all directions Akuvi
got scared; nothing like this had ever happened to her in her entire
life. She wanted to run away but she was frightened of what the old lady
would do to her. So she gathered up all her courage and started picking
the plants that were saying they were not ripe enough or mature enough
to be picked, just as the old lady had told her to do. She took the
vegetables home and the old lady instructed her to peel them and boil
them. She finished this task, and then looked for mortar and pestle to
pound the fufu, but she couldn’t find these anywhere. So she went to the
old lady and asked her what she should use. The old lady told her: “I
haven’t got a mortar or pestle and I still eat fufu. I still manage to
pound it!” All Akuvi could say was: “Well, how do you do it? Can you
show me?” The old lady raised an arm, and said to Akuvi, “Go to the back
of the house. There you’ll find a log, bring it here. When Akuvi came
back with the log a few minutes later, the old lady was lying on the
ground and instructed Akuvi to put the wood under her head.
Resting her head on the log, she told
Akuvi to use her nostrils as the mortar; pointing to them she said:
“This is where you’ll pound the fufu!”
Akuvi was shocked, never had she heard
of anything like this before. But the old lady reassured her: “Don’t
worry dear, I always do it like this and it comes out perfect every
time. Now it became clear to Akuvi that the old lady had magical powers.
Her nostrils expanded into a big bowl, and Akuvi was able to pound the
fufu. When she finished the old lady told Akuvi to go to her room where
she kept a pot full of soup, and to bring it out to her. Akuvi hung the
pot over the fire to heat the soup and brought out a little table for
the old lady to eat at. The old lady sat down and started to eat. Akuvi
washed her hands and sat down with the old lady as she was by now very
hungry.
But the old lady stopped her taking any
food. “Don’t even think about it. Before I let you have any of this
food, you have to tell me what my name is.” Akuvi didn’t know the old
lady’s name, she had absolutely no idea. How could she? Nobody in the
village had ever even mentioned her. She started guessing some names,
Mawutor, Mawuko, but all the names she could think of were the wrong
ones, and she was not allowed to touch any of the food. After the old
lady finished her meal she gave the pot to Akuvi to fetch some water
from the river. Obediently Akuvi took the pot and made her way to the
river. As she approached the water, she saw a crab. The crab called out
to her: “Hey there, little girl! I know what’s happening to you, that
old witch has got you guessing her name, hasn’t she? I can help you
because I know her very well!”
Akuvi was very excited: “Mr. Crab, if
you know her name please tell me and help me out of my misery!” The crab
answered: “Her name is Zeglo. Call her Mama Zeglo!” Akuvi jumped in the
air, she was so happy, at last, she would get something to eat. She
thanked the crab profusely and set off home again. But she was so happy,
she was dancing and jumping all the way home, carrying the pot filled
with water on her head. She stumbled over some stones that were strewn
on the path, the pot fell off her head and broke into a hundred pieces.
She started to cry, she knew the old lady would be furious with her.
Slowly she finished the walk home, and as she came up to the house the
old lady was sitting outside, waiting for her. When the old lady saw
her, she asked immediately: “What happened to my pot? Where is my
water?”
Akuvi answered, “Mama Zeglo, I fell down on the path and your pot broke.”
The old lady was astonished that Akuvi
had guessed her name correctly, so she asked her: “How did you find out
my name? Who told you?”
Akuvi replied that she met a crab by the
river who told her. The old lady jumped up, she was indeed furious.
“I’m going down to the riverside, I’ll find that stupid old crab and
teach him a lesson!” She got up, took her stick and a calabash and
walked briskly towards the river. She fully intended to punish the crab
for his indiscretion. And she did indeed find the crab still rooting
around in the sand on the riverbank, and addressed him in an angry tone:
“Why on earth did you disclose my name to that young girl? What
business is it of yours?” The crab hardly deigned to look at the old
lady. “Why don’t you bugger off, he said. Who do you think you are;
can’t I mention your name to anybody?” The old lady got even more
annoyed, and she raised her stick and hit the crab on the back. Wallop!
And again: Woosh!
The crab jumped sideways and shouted at
the old lady: “Hey what! What are you playing at? Hitting me? You don’t
know me! Just you wait!” The crab dived under the water and started
scooping up white sand, splashing it all over the old lady’s head so
that all her hair turned white. She got even more angry, so angry that
she just threw the calabash at the crab, which landed on his back and
got stuck there. She tried to pull it off, but try as she might, it was
stuck hard. The crab groaned, and the old lady cursed, but they could
not remove it. That’s why when you see a crab now, it’s got a hard shell
on his back, and when you see an old lady, her hair is white all over!
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