A Walk In The Night
By Alex La Guma
PLOT SUMMARY OF “A
WALK IN THE NIGHT”
One.
The story begins with Michael
Adonis, known as Mikey, who has been fired from his job at a sheet-metal
factory. Mikey walks home through his impoverished neighbourhood, seething with
resentment over what has happened. The neighbourhood is filled with gang
activity and prostitution. He goes to the Portuguese Restaurant where he meets
his friend Willie Boy at the café and tells him about being fired for swearing
at a white foreman who accused him of being lazy when he requested to use the
washroom (piss-house). Willieboy brags that he never wishes to work for whites.
Mikey refers to the foreman as “White
sonofabitch” and promises to revenge by saying “that sonavabitch, that bloody white sonavabitch, I’ll get him”. (p.5)
Willieboy’s gang led by Foxy
enters the café to look for Sockies, a gang member who is supposed to assist
them with a burglary that night. The gang teases Mikey for being a “good boy”, because he refuses to join
them. They ask Mikey to tell Sockies that they are looking for him in case he
meets him and they leave. Mikey pays the bills for the food he has eaten and
leaves the café.
Two
Mikey goes for a walk through the
neighbourhood to shake off his anger. During the course of his walk, he meets a
homeless boy named Joe and in their talk Joe informs Mikey that he has heard
that the City Council is planning to make the beaches so that only white people
can go there. Mikey gives him the money for food and he goes away. Mikey turns
towards the pub but is stopped and searched by police who suspect him of
possessing dagga (marijuana) but they find him with the money and cigarettes
only. Discovering that he has nothing they leave him.
Three
Mikey goes to a pub where his
mind reminds him of the incidents of the police and the loss of his job. Foxy
and other gang members come to ask him if he has seen Sockies yet. He talks to
his friends; a taxi-driver and Mr Greene about racial injustice in South Africa
and the way the Negros were also killed in America. The taxi-driver narrates a
crime in their neighbourhood, where a man named Flippy wanted to stab Cully-
the butcher man for messing around with his girl and Cully brings a butcher
knife and stabs him in the stomach to the point that his guts almost come out
but he tries to hold them back. The ambulance comes and takes Flippy to
hospital while Cully is taken to jail. He continues drinking while the driver
leaves and later he too leaves.
Four
He finally heads home to his
tenement where he lived. At the foot of the staircases he meets a girl named
Hazel; who is going out. After a brief chat the two depart. Mikey climbs
upstairs and meets his neighbour, an alcoholic and diabetic Irish old man named
Uncle Doughty, who invites him over for a drink. We are told the old man had
been an actor, in Great Britain, South Africa and Australia and had served in
two wars but is now hopeless as he is deserted and abandoned waiting for death.
Mikey supports him to his room. He tells Mikey that his wife was a coloured
lady. He laments how he used to be something but now he has nobody to look
after him and he started crying.
Still angry at the injustice he
had suffered that day, Mikey says “what
the hell you crying about. You old white bastard, you got nothing to worry
about.” (p.25). He taunts Uncle Doughty by withholding his bottle of cheap
wine. Uncle Doughty unintentionally insults a drunken Mikey, who mixes his
words with those of the foreman who fired him. In a rage, Mikey strikes Doughty
in the head (sprouting skull) and
kills him.
Five
After sobering up and realizing
what he had done, he says “God, I didn’t
mean it. I didn’t mean to kill the blerry old man” (p.27). He flees back to
his own apartment and quickly shuts the door, because he says “the law don’t like white people being
finished off.” (p.28). He makes sure that nobody sees him.
Six
Police Constable called Raalt in
a patrol van is thinking about his stubborn wife and says “Well her mother warned me she was a no-good bitch, but I was silly
enough to think nothing of it” (p.29). His wife had been good looking
before they had married but now she had gone to seed and that irritated him.
The driver of the patrol wagon suggests “I
think we ought to resume our patrol. Don’t you think we’ve been parked long
enough?” (p.29) Then, they leave and continue with the patrol.
Seven
Willieboy thinks of going to
borrow money from Mikey and on the way he meets the gang (Foxy and the other
two guys). They ask him whether he has seen Sockies but he says nay. They ask
him to tell him to meet them at the club. He leaves them and on his way he
comes across a couple making love in the darkened doorway of the tenement
between a fruit shop and a shoe store. He goes to Mikey’s room and tried to
open it but it was locked. When Mikey does not answer the door, Willieboy goes
to ask Doughty for money instead. When he knocks no one replies. As he opens
the door he sees the old man’s corpse.
Eight.
In the room down the corridor, a
stevedore –Franky Lorenzo, wearing a singlet and corduroy is lying facing the
ceiling. He was so tired because of hard work and the fact that his wife had
earlier told him that she was once more pregnant. His four children (two boys
and two girls) share one bed and a one thread-bare, worn, sweaty blanket in the
same room. Grace, Franky’s wife is breast-feeding the fifth baby. He believes
that children are riches for poor people even when they don’t have food in the
house to feed them.
He wonders why rich people have
enough money to feed up to twenty children but they only get one or two. Franky
shouts at his wife to control her births by drinking the pills and she gets
offended and cries. Franky apologises sincerely and asks for some tea. His wife
goes to take the water in the latrine tap while he holds the baby.
Nine
Willieboy is frightened and runs
away down the stairs after seeing the dead body. A woman sees him running from
Uncle Doughty’s room and goes to inspect, only to find that Doughty is dead.
Meanwhile, Constable Raalt is
thinking of killing his wife but then decides against it because it is a sin to
kill. The driver wishes to be separated from Raalt because he is shaming the
white race and ruining their superiority. Then Raalt goes to Jolly Boys Social
club. When he enters the room all people inside show various reactions. He
strikes a man called Chips until blood forms in a pool in the corner of his
mouth. Chips takes out the money and gives him five pounds and he leaves.
Ten.
Mikey is still in his room when
he hears the door-knob rattle. He wonders who the hell could that be and says “Why the hell don’t they go away”. He
says that he didn’t mean to kill the Oldman but he doesn’t seem sympathetic as
he declares “To hell with all of them and
that old man too. What for did he want to go on living for anyway?” He
utters many abusive words in his mind and thought of getting a wife. A woman
screamed outside and people gathered to witness the murder of the old Irishman.
One woman is heard saying “old man. I saw
who done it. I saw who done it”. Afterwards, the crowd go away Mikey opens
his door and moves downstairs. Foxy and his friends still looking for Sockies,
see him disappearing into the darkness.
Eleven
Willieboy is walking in street
called District Six trying to hide his identity in the shadows. He thinks of
whether they would suspect him for the murder but he assures himself that he
has nothing to do with it. He goes to Miss Gipsy place and asks for wine but
the woman seems reluctant claiming that he has to pay first. She gives him
cheap wine and tells him to go away after finishing because she is expecting
some customers.
Finally the customers; Red,
George, Ray Ybarra plus three African girls arrived and have a drink. In his
drunken state Willieboy accuses Gipsy for allowing them to mess with African
girls. They become angry and start a serous fight. He takes a knife and George
throws a bottle and missed Willieboy by a yard. As Willieboy advances forward
with a knife he falls down and Gipsy hits him behind the ear. They drug him and
place him out on the stoep. When he regains his senses he goes down the street.
Twelve
Constable Raalt sees the crowd
and goes to ask them what is happening. They tell him there is a dead body
upstairs. One man in the crowd called John Abrahams says he knows who did it
and others look at him angrily. He explains how Willieboy gave him a match to
light his cigarette when he was going upstairs and he came downstairs running
then a woman screamed. When he went upstairs with the others they found the
Oldman dead. So he believes Willieboy did it.
Franky Lorenzo alerted him to
stop narrating but Raalt threatened him saying “Do you want to be arrested for intimidating a witness and defending
the ends of justice?” Then, Abrahams continued to say the boy he saw was
wearing a yellow shirt. Constable Raalt determines to get him even if he had to
gather all black bastards wearing a yellow shirt.
Thirteen.
Mikey goes to the Indian café
where he meets Joe at the table eating. He had bought the food with the money
Mikey gave him. As they talk Joe
discovers that Mikey is not alright. Mikey admits that he had troubles
disturbing him. And his trouble was “He
felt as if he was the only man who had ever killed another and thought himself
a curiosity at which people should wonder. He longed to be questioned about it,
about the way he had felt when he had done it, about the impulse that had
caused him to take the life of another. But the difficulty was that to reveal
his secret was dangerous, so he had to carry it with him for all time or accept
the consequence.” (62)
Foxy and the two youths come
again looking for Sockies. They ask Mikey to join them in their mission. Mikey
feels good about the idea but doesn’t respond immediately, so they give him
time to make up his mind and meet them at the club. When they leave Joe warns
Mikey not to join them. Joe narrates how he was separated from his family that
was living in Prince Lane a long time ago. That his father left one morning and
never came back.
His father had been jobless and
life was getting tough that they had no food but they had to beg from door to
door. They also failed to pay the house rent so the landlord evicted them. His
mother sold the furniture and the family returned to the country but Joe
refused to go and ended up in the streets. Mikey leaves but Joe warns him again
not to join the gangsters.
Fourteen.
Willieboy walks in the streets
feeling muzzy and his head aching. He feels angry and humiliated by the
manhandling he had received at Gipsy’s shebeen. He promises to revenge. He
thinks of how he had wished to have some sort of power driven to wherever he
wanted, giving orders for the execution of enemies.
He meets Mr Greene in the streets
and beats him asking him for money. Mr. Greene says that he has got nothing and
when Willieboy searches him and finds he has nothing he leaves him to go home.
As Willieboy reaches the end of the street he sees a police van.
Fifteen
As Mikey walks in the street he
meets Joe who appreciates for the money he gave him for food. Joe advises Mikey
to stay away from Foxy’s gang because they would land him in trouble. “But they’ll get you in trouble, Mikey. They
break into places and steal, and I heard they stabbed a couple of other johns”
(p.71) Mikey was angry and told him to go to hell. Mikey goes to the Club
where he meets Foxy and the other guys. They propose the deal they are going to
do and ask him to take the part of Sockies and he agrees.
They smoke marijuana and give it
to Mikey as well who feels happy after smoking. They wake up Toyer the driver
and tell him to prepare for the business ahead. They hear the sound of a gun
shot from outside and Foxy goes out to investigate.
Sixteen
Constable Raalt and the driver
are in their patrol and the driver is not happy by the way Cons. Raalt keeps on
talking about his troubles with his wife. He is also not happy by the way Raalt
keeps on bullying Africans and he suspects they may one day turn on him. He
remembers how he once loved a girl and was writing occasional letters to her
when he is interrupted by Raalt’s harsh voice.
Raalt had seen a Black boy with a
yellow shirt and suspected it is Willieboy. They start chasing him ordering him
to stop running. The driver tries to stop Raalt from shooting the boy.
Willieboy hides somewhere while Raalt is searching for him. People start
gathering after hearing the sounds of the shot but he threatens them to get
back. In his hideout Willieboy wonders why they are chasing him.
He remembers when he was 7 years
old his mother slapped him for buying fish with the money he got as a
commission from the sub-agent of the newspapers he was selling. He also
remembers how his father used to come back home drunk and beat him and his
mother.
Finally, Willieboy decides to run
from his hideout and Raalt fires his gun after seeing him. Willieboy searches
for his knife after seeing Raalt, but Raalt fires again and Willieboy falls
down.
Seventeen
The crowd of people is confused
and they wonder why the whites keep on shooting them. The driver blames Raalt
for shooting Willieboy while they were about to catch him. He proposes that
they should call the ambulance and rush him to the hospital but Raalt protests
and says they should take him to the police station. They load him in the back
of the van to take him to the station.
Eighteen
Willieboy is inside the van and
the thoughts are flashing through his mind. Raalt wants to smoke and discovers
that he has no cigarette left. He asks the driver to drive to the Portuguese
Restaurant, but the driver warns him that they should first rush the boy to the
station. Raalt insists and goes to the restaurant and starts chatting with the
Portuguese proprietor. The driver comes in to tell him that the boy has to be
rushed to the station because he had screamed for help. Willieboy slowly starts
losing the feelings of sensation and finally he dies.
Nineteen
Foxy and his gang are getting
ready to go for the robbery. Uncle Doughty’s body has been removed and the
police have locked his room. John Abrahams is lying in his room wondering why
he has betrayed his people. “He thought
dully, What’s it help you, turning on your own people?” (p.91). Joe makes
his way back to the sea walking alone through the starlight darkness. Frank
Lorenzo is sleeping peacefully while his wife Grace is awake in the dark.
INTRODUCTION
A Walk in the Night and other stories is a novella by South African author and
anti-apartheid activist, Alex La Guma. The book was published in 1968 and
contains seven short stories that detail the injustices arising from South
Africa’s system of racial apartheid. The title piece, “A Walk in the Night”,
tells the story of an impoverished black South African man who is tempted to
join a gang after being unjustly fired from his job. The rest of the events in
the plot of the story take place in the same night as the title suggests.
The novella “A walk in the night”
revolves around the themes of racism, social inequity, poverty, crime, and
injustice. The story examines the lives of various marginalized people
in apartheid era South Africa, and the things that they have in common, as well
as what divides them. They also depict the dehumanization of black and poor
people during apartheid and condemn the widespread social injustices of this
chapter in the nation’s history.
STYLE
The author of the novella has used several techniques in presenting the
intended message.
¨
Narrative technique. The dominant style is a narrative technique in which the author takes
the role of the narrator and tells what is happening.
¨
Dialogue. There are several dialogues in the plot of the story bringing the
characters and events to life. They help to reveal the personality traits of
some characters like Constable Raalt and Andries: (p.57)
“Looks like he was hit on the head”.
“It’s a job of the detectives” the driver said….
“What’s your hurry man? Constable
Raalt asked. “this is our patrol, isn’t it?”
¨
Point of view. The dominant point of view is Omniscient third Person point of view
where most of the events are viewed from the narrator’s eye. There are also
some cases of first person point of view in which some characters like Mikey
narrate their personal experience.
¨
The use of Songs. To enrich his style he has used a song in page 5
When mah baby lef’ me,
She gimme a mule to rahd
When mah baby lef’ me,
She gimme a mule to rahd
PLOT.
The plot of the story is largely straightforward narration employing
chronological plot in succession of nineteen chapters. However there are some
cases of flashback in the plot of the story.
¨
Willieboy’s story. When he is chased by the police, he remembers as a child the way his
mother used to shout at him “You been
naughty again?” and the way his father used to beat him and his mother.
(p.79-80)
¨
Joe’s background. Joe narrates how his family was poor that they failed to pay the house
rent and the landlord evicted them. They sold the furniture and went back to
the country but he refused to go with them and ended up in the streets.
SETTING
The setting of the novella is typically urban. The time is during the
era of apartheid and racial injustice in South Africa. There are several events
and places that prove the authenticity of an urban setting some of which are
the sub-settings of the major setting.
¨
Presence of Restaurants, bars and cafés and night Clubs are common in
towns (cities).
¨
People living in rented tenements, is common in town.
¨
Presence of factories.
¨
Night police patrols.
¨
Crimes and gang activities like robbery, drug addiction, prostitution
etc. are common in town.
LANGUAGE USE
The language used is simple to understand though there is frequent use
of non-standard English and dialectal words that might pose a difficulty in
understanding for readers who are not conversant with this dialect.
“Howzit”, “Hoit pally” (p.3) Other
words include dagga for marijuana,
Waar loop jy rond, jong?” (p.10)
Also abusive language has been used to a large extent not only to show
the Africans’ resentment towards the whole situation of racial injustice but
also to portray the picture of moral decay because such language is used even
by the Whites like Constable Raalt.
“You bastards, you want t get shot too” (p 84)
“That sonofabitch, that bloody sonavabich”, (p.5)
Figures of Speech.
Simile
¨
Cracked voice like the twang of a flat guitar string.
(p.5)
¨
Drops of blood like lipstick marks on his pink
forehead. (p.8)
¨
He just seemed to have happened, appearing in the
District like a cockroach emerging through a floorboard. (p.8)
¨
They had hard, frozen faces as if carved out of pink
ice….(p.19)
¨
The voice was hard and flat as the snap of a steel
string…(p.10)
¨
Under the cap he had a wily, grinning face and eyes as
brown and alert as cockroaches. (p15)
¨
…his head swinging gently back to normal like a
merry-go-round slowing down and finally stopping. (p.19)
¨
His shirt was out dangling around him like a
night-gown. (p.22)
¨
He made his way slowly along the wall, like a great
crab, breathing stertorously. (p.22)
¨
The room was as hot and airless as a newly-opened
tomb…(p.24)
¨
…the flow of Hanover Street was like the opening of a
cave.(p.28)
Metaphor
¨
(The pub) It was a forum, a parliament, a fountain of
wisdom and a cesspool of nonsense…(p.12)
¨
Money’s all the trouble in the world. (p.23)
¨
…her eyes were dark wells of sadness mixed with joy.
(p.34)
Personification
¨
…at his legs and buttocks, the pain jumping through
him. (p.88)
¨
…but the stars remained bright, flickering and
shimmering so that the sky was alive with them. (p.90)
Oxymoron
¨
Michael Adonis held it out of his reach, grinning and
feeling pleasantly malicious. (p26)
¨
…because he was tired and irritable and happy and
worried all at the same time. (p33)
¨
…she had a young-old face….(p.36)
Symbolism
Goose – woman (p.18)
Exaggeration.
¨
Michael Adonis said, but took the stick-thin arm
…..(p.23)
¨
He waggled the bottle in front of the decayed ancient
face with its purple veins… (p.26)
¨
A flood of thoughts bubbled through his mind. (p.27)
¨
…a pool of blood was forming under him spreading on the
asphalt. (p.83)
CHARACTERS
Michael Adonis (Mikey)
¨
He is a murderer. He kills the Old Irishman by striking him with a
bottle of wine. (p.27)
¨ He is abusive. He is so abusive and uses abusive
words when he is angry. Eg “that sonavabitch, that bloody white sonavabitch, I’ll get him”. (p.5)
¨ He is revengeful. He plans to revenge against the injustice done to him by whites. “That bloody white sonavabitch, I’ll get him”. (p.5) That is the
reason why he hits Uncle Doughty, and joins the gang.
¨
He is a drunkard and a heavy smoker. He smokes cigarettes every time and later he smokes
dagga. He also drinks wine heavily.
¨
He is hot-tempered. Joe advices him politely not to
join the gang but he answers Joe harhly. “Go
to hell. Leave me alone” (p.71)
¨
He is a bad decision maker. When he is fired he becomes moody and promises to
revenge, he kills the old Irishman just over a minor misunderstanding and
finally joins the gang of robbers.
¨
He hates white people. After killing Uncle Doughty he does not feel guilty
of the same but he feels superior.
¨
He has a changing behaviour. In other words he has no firm stand. He was a nice
man that even Foxy’s gang acknowledged that he cannot accept to join them but
later he joins them.
¨
He is a victim of racism. He is fired from his job by a white foreman just
because he asked to go to the piss-house (toilet).
¨
He is poor. He is among the poor people who live in the
tenements and work for whites to earn a living. When he is fired from his job
he joins the gang of robbers.
Willieboy
¨
He is a victim of racial injustice. He is killed by Constable Raalt just by being
suspected as a murderer.
¨
He is a heavy drunkard and a smoker. Just like other guys in the society he smokes
cigarettes and drinks wine.
¨
He is poor. He goes to borrow money from Mikey then Uncle Doughty
and discovers the murder. He also goes to ask for cheap wine from Miss Gipsy.
¨
He is quarrelsome/troublesome. He quarrels with Miss Gipsy and his customers just
after provoking them interfering their relationships.
¨
He is a robber. He arrests Mr. Greene, beats and searches him
looking for money only to discover that he had no money. (p.69) Also when he
promises to pay Miss Gipsy for the wine she says “Soon as you get money? You mean soon as you rob somebody again?”
(p.48)
¨
He is a hypocrite. He walks around wearing a crucifix and mentions words
like Jesus save me! but he has no any
religious devotion. The author says “He
wore a sportscoat over a yellow T-shirt and a crucifix around his neck, more as
a flamboyant decoration than as an act of religious devotion” (p.3)
Joe.
¨
He is a homeless poor street boy. He comes from a poor family that was forced to move
to the country leaving him alone in the city.
¨
He is a good advisor. He advises Mikey not to join the gang because they
will land him in trouble but Mikey ignores him.
¨
He is a victim of racial injustice. His family is evicted from the house after failing
to pay the house rent because his father is jobless.
Constable Raalt
¨
He is a murderer and a hypocrite. He is always thinking of killing his wife but decides
against it, because it is sin. However he ends up killing the innocent
Willieboy as if it is not a sin to kill an African.
¨
He is a cruel and a merciless police constable. He is so violent to Africans as he beats them
mercilessly. Also when he shoots Willieboy, the diver suggests calling the
Ambulance but he refuses and suggests taking the boy to the police station
instead.
¨
He is a heavy smoker. He smokes cigarettes to the point that Mr Andries is
annoyed. He even ignores to take Willieboy to the station and goes to look for
a cigarette.
¨
He has no true love to his wife. He always has trouble with his wife and sometimes
thinks of killing her.
¨
He is a racist. He hates Africans and mistreats them.
Uncle Doughty.
¨
He is an ex-actor. He says “I used to be an actor. God bless my soul.” (p.25)
¨
He is a deserted old man. The author says
“Now he was a deserted, abandoned ruin, destroyed by alcohol…” (p.23)
¨
He is a war veteran. He served in two wars. (p.23)
¨
He is a smoker, alcoholic, and
diabetic. After being deserted he becomes alcoholic and a smoker waiting for
death. “This old man, who was an Irishman
and who was dying of alcoholism, diabetes and old age, had once been an actor”
(p.23)
¨
He is muredered by Mikey. Mikey strikes his head with a bottle of wine and kills him.
Foxy and his gang.
¨
They are drug addicts (drunkards and heavy smokers of dagga – marijuana.
¨
They are murderers. Joe warns Mikey “They break into places and steal, and I heard they stabbed a couple of
other johns” (p.71) he adds “They’ll
murder somebody and get hanged, Mikey”
¨
They are robbers. They plan and carry out robbery missions in the
city.
¨
They are bad advisors. They advise Mikey to stop being a good guy and join
their gang. They even influence him to smoke dagga.
Gipsy
¨
She is a very tough and strong woman. The author says “She
was strong and she held onto him while Willieboy struggled”. (p.52)
¨
She is a petty business woman. She owns a café where she earns money to support her
life.
¨
She humiliates Willieboy. After giving him a bottle of cheap wine she tells
him to leave after finishing because she is expecting some respectable
customers (p.48)
Franky Lorenzo
¨
He is apologetic. When he shouts at his wife and offends her, he then apologises
“Awright. It’s awright. I’m sorry I
shouted” (p.35)
¨
He is poor. He shares a room with his four children two boys and
two girls who share a bed and a worn out blanket.
¨
He works as a stevedore. This is a person whose job is moving goods on and off ships. The author describes him this way “He was a stevedore and worked like hell in the docks and he felt angry
with himself” (p.35)
John Abrahams
¨
He is a betrayer and cannot keep secrets. He betrays his fellow Africans by giving witness to
the police although he was not right.
¨
He is a smoker. Willieboy gives him a matchbox to light his
cigarette but later be gives false witness against him.
¨
He suffers intrapersonal conflict. After betraying Willieboy he asks himself. “What’s it help you, turning on
your own people?” (p.91).
Andries
¨
He is a policeman and a driver of the police patrol
van.
¨
He is nervous. He fears the racial tension might one day result
into something terrible.
¨
He is kind-hearted and sympathetic. He hates the way Cons. Raalt mistreats Africans. He
wonders why he shot Willieboy while they could just get hold of him. He also
suggests calling the ambulance to rush him to the hospital to save his life.
THEMATIC ANALYSIS
RACISM AND APARTHEID POLICY.
The author shows the extent to which racism was tremendous in South
Africa during the time of Apartheid policy. Africans were marginalised in all
spheres of existence. The following
cases illustrate the injustice, oppression and humiliation that was done to Africans on the basis of
colour bar.
¨
Racism in workplaces. Africans are fired from their jobs just for minor reasons. Michael
Adonis is a case in point.
¨
Racism in settlement areas. Africans live in dirty streets in rented tenements.
Mikey, Franky Lorenzo, Abrahams and others are living in one apartment. Even
Andries wonders why Uncle Doughty – white man – was living with the blacks. “What would a white man be doing living in a
place like this?” (p.57)
¨
Racism in social gathering. Joe and Mikey discuss about how the City council plans
to make the beaches to be special for whites only. Joe says “I hear they are going to make the beaches
so only white people can go there?” (p.9).
¨
Racism in relationship. It is shown that apart from South Africa, even in
America people are treated on the basis of colour bar. Mr Greene reports “I read
how they hanged up a negro in the street in America. Whites done it.” and
then he adds “Some whites took a negro
out in the street and hanged him up. They said he did not look properly at some
woman.”(p.15) This was the time
of Jim Crow laws in America.
POVERTY
Poverty has spread all over the African location to the point that many
Africans have lost hopes and engage in illegal crimes due to poor life. The
following are cases in point.
¨
Mikey is poor and works for the whites in a factory to earn a living.
When he is fired, he becomes hopeless and decides to join a gang of robbers.
¨
Joe is a poor boy whose family went back to live in the country after
failing to pay the house rent and life was becoming tough for them in town.
Talking of his father Joe says “He didn’t
have no job. He was out of job for a long time and we didn’t get things to eat
often. Me and my brother Matty used to go out mornings and ask from door to
door for pieces of stale bread. (p.66)
¨
Franky Lorenzo lives a poor life with his five children and his wife
Grace. Four of their children share one bed and a worn out blanket. The author
says “Four of their children lay sleeping
in the narrow single bed against the wall on the other side of the room. They
slept under the one thread-bare, worn, sweaty blanket…” (p.33)
¨
Willieboy is poor. That’s why he goes to borrow the money from Mikey and
discovers Uncle Doughty’s dead body. He also goes to ask for cheap wine from Miss
Gipsy promising to pay when he gets money. He beats and searches Mr Greene in
the street expecting to get money from him.
CLASSES/SOCIAL INEQUALITY
¨
There are two major classes in this society. On one hand there is a high
class comprising of rich white people who own the major means of production
like land, factories, tenements and have political power controlling the
government organs like the police who work in the favour of whites.
¨
On the other hand there is a low class comprising of poor Africans who
just work for the whites in factories and live in rented tenements owned by
Whites. These ones live miserably and are marginalised by the whites in many
spheres.
CONFLICTS
Intrapersonal conflict.
¨
Mikey suffers intrapersonal conflict after killing Uncle Doughty. He is
thinking “What’s the law for? To kick us
poor brown bastards around. You think they are going to listen to your story;
Jesus, and he was a white man, too. …well I didn’t mean to finish him” (p.41)
¨
John Abrahams suffers intrapersonal conflict after betraying Willieboy
and he gets killed for the crime he did not commit. He regrets “What’s it help you, turning on
your own people?” (p.91).
Personal conflicts.
¨
There is a conflict between Mikey and the white foreman. It occurs when Mikey asks to use the lavatory. It
causes Mikey to lose his job. Mikey promises to revenge.
¨
There is a conflict between Cully the butcher-shop man and Flippy. This resulted from the rumours that Cully was messing
around with his goose (woman). Cully stabs Flippy with a butcher knife.
¨
There is a conflict between Willieboy and Miss Gipsy. This occurs when Willieboy asks her why she lets the
foreigners to mess with African girls. Protecting her customers Gipsy hits him
expertly behind the ear.
Social conflict.
¨
There is a general social conflict between the white population and the
black population in South Africa. The former is mistreating the later just
because of the colour bar.
Family conflict.
¨
There are three major family conflicts recorded in the story.
o Constable Raalt is in conflict with his wife to the
point that he thinks of killing her. “It’s
enough to make a man commit murder, constable Raalt told himself, sitting in
the driving cabin of the patrol van. I’d wring her bloody neck but it’s a sin
to kill your wife.” (p.36)
o Frank Lorenzo is in conflict with his wife over the
question of childbirth. F. Lorenzo accuses his wife for not controlling her
birth by drinking the pills. She too accuses him for not controlling his
pleasures.
o Willieboy reports how his father used to beat him with
his mother and the mother revenged by beating Willieboy. The author says “His mother beat him at the slightest
provocation and he knew that she was wreaking vengeance upon him for the
beatings she received from his father. His father came home drunk most nights
and beat his mother and him with a heavy leather belt” (p.80)
MORAL DECAY (IMMORALITY).
The author shows how decayed and rotten this society is. There are many
cases that show moral decay in the society. The following are a few of them.
¨
Alcoholism/drunkenness. Many people are alcoholic and heavy drunkards. Willieboy, Mikey, Foxy
and his gang, Mr Green, and many other Africans meet in the bars or clubs to
drink alcohol while others like Uncle Doughty take it to their rooms.
¨
Crimes such as robbery. There is a state of insecurity due to robbery. Foxy and his gang
commit crimes in the city by breaking into houses and stealing or murdering
people. Joe says “They break into
places and steal, and I heard they stabbed a couple of other johns” (p.71)
¨
Manslaughter. This is a
crime of killing somebody illegally but not deliberately. Mikey kills Uncle
Doughty unintentionally but he doesn’t feel sympathetic about it. He says “Well, what’s he want to come and live here
among us browns for? To hell with him. Well, I didn’t mean to finish him.
Awright, man, he’s dead and you’re alive. Stay alive.” (p.41). constable
Raalt shoots Willieboy but he does not feel any responsibility for what he has
done or rush him for medical care he lingers until the boy dies.
¨
Drug addiction (smoking dagga). Many people are addicted either to alcoholism or to
smoking cigarette and dagga (marijuana).
¨
Abusive language. The society is rotten and this is manifested by the way they address
each other using abusive language. E.g. Raalt calls the Africans “You bastards, you want to be shot, too?”
he also says “This crowd. A lot of bloody
baboons” (p.84)
Mikey also says, “That
sonofabitch, that bloody sonavabich”, (p.5)
¨
Prostitution and making love in the doorway of the tenement. On his way to Mikey’s room Willieboy he sees a couple
making love in the doorway. The author says “In
the darkened doorway of the tenement between a fruit shop and a shoe store a
couple made love, their faces glued together…”(p.30-31)
POSITION OF WOMEN
¨
Women are portrayed as prostitutes and tools for pleasure. Men use women
to satisfy their sexual desires. Franky Lorenzo uses his wife as a tool for
pleasure as a result he has got 5 children and his wife is pregnant. The white
customers (Red, George, and Ray Ybarra) use African girls as
tools for pleasure.
¨
Women are portrayed as a child bearers and caretakers. F. Lorenzo’s wife Grace has given birth to five
children and takes care of them. Also Willieboy’s mother used to warn him not
to be naughty.
¨
Women are portrayed as weak people. Willieboy’s father used to beat his
wife but because she could not fight back she would avenge by beating
Willieboy.
¨
Women are portrayed as light-hearted. Grace cries just after being told to drink the pills
to control her childbirth. She also screams when she sees Uncle Doughty’s dead
body and alerts others in the tenement.
Other minor themes include.
a)
Hypocrisy
¨
Willieboy is a hypocrite. He
walks around wearing a crucifix and mentions words like Jesus save me! but he has no any religious devotion. The author
says “He wore a sportscoat over a yellow
T-shirt and a crucifix around his neck, more as a flamboyant decoration than as
an act of religious devotion” (p.3)
b)
Awareness
¨
Willieboy is aware of the mistreatments done to Africans by whites that
he has decided not to work for the whites. He says “Working for whites. Happens all the time, man. Me, I never work for no
white john. Not even brown one. To hell with work. Work, work, work, where does
it get you?” (p.4).
¨
Constable Raalt is aware of the fact that killing his wife is a sin.
However he shoots and kills Willieboy and doesn’t care.
c)
Betrayal
¨
John Abrahams betrays his fellow Africans by giving false witness
against them. For example he says that Willieboy killed the Old Irishman while
it is not true. Later he discovers that what he has done is not fair betraying
his own people. He regrets “What’s it
help you, turning on your own people?” (p.91).
¨
Flippy’s woman (goose) betrays him by messing with Cully something that
causes the conflict between the two. Flippy asks Cully “I hear you have been messing with my goose, hey? You been have a good
time with my goose hey?” (p.16)
d)
Ignorance
¨
Poor people are ignorant of birth control methods. Franky Lorenzo
summarises this situation by saying: “The
rich people got money but they got one, two kids. They got enough to feed ten,
twenty children and they only make one or two. We haven’t got even enough for
one kid and we make eight, nine – one a year.” (p.34)
e)
Wife beating.
¨
Willieboy’s father used to beat his wife and the mother revenged by
beating Willieboy. He says “His mother
beat him at the slightest provocation and he knew that she was wreaking
vengeance upon him for the beatings she received from his father. His father
came home drunk most nights and beat his mother and him with a heavy leather
belt” (p.80)
Messages
¨
Robbery, alcoholism, dagga & cigarette smoking, prostitution and
other crimes should be discouraged because they are not solutions to problems.
They just create more problems without settling the old ones.
¨
Spouse beating is outdated it should be discouraged. The married couples
should find a way to settle their disputes peacefully without having to fight
against each other.
¨
Racism and social injustice
should be abolished. They create unnecessary hatred and unhealthy relationship
among the members of the same community.
¨
We should work hard to alleviate poverty in our society.
¨
African Governments should create job opportunities for the citizens.
This will help to reduce the number of youths engaging in criminal acts like
robbery and prostitution to get money.
¨
Betrayal and hypocrisy should be discouraged in the society.
¨
Poor people should learn how to control birth. This will help them to
avoid large families they cannot afford to feed.
Relevance
¨
This novella is still relevant today as it was in the days of Apartheid.
Although to some extent racial tension has slowed down in South Africa, there
are cases of Xenophobia (a strong feeling of dislike or fear of people from other countries) reported which were inherited from the racial
injustice they suffered during the apartheid regime.
¨
Poverty among the black population in South Africa is still a problem
that calls for the attention from the government.
¨
The crimes like robbery, prostitution, smoking marijuana, murder, and
alcoholism are still reported everywhere in African large cities.
¨
Police injustice and torture to the citizens is still experienced today
especially when they are defending the interests of those in power. They use
excessive force to suppress resistances from the unarmed citizens.