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Omeros Book III, Chapter XXV Summary

i

  • Achille has come to a foreign shore—it's the coast of Africa, straight out of the movies he saw as a child—and is taken captive by a warrior, who paddles him up a muddy river. 
  • God speaks to Achille, telling him that he's been granted permission to go home, and that he sent the bird as a guide.
  • Achille feels as though he should remember the names of the gods of his ancestral home, but can't.

ii

  • Achille makes his way down this branch of the Congo and comes to a settlement; someone helps him out of the boat.
  • The narrator interrupts to say that he is half with Achille at this point and half with the midshipman in the Netherlands. Cool party trick, bro.
  • Achille is welcomed by the people of the settlement and brought to a hut. He sees his father walking toward him.

iii

  • Achille faces his father and the two introduce themselves (time works as some kind of universal translator). 
  • Achille's father is called Afolabe. He and the rest of the tribe don't understand the meaning of Achille's name, so Afolabe asks—but Achille doesn't know.
  • He tells his father that he and the others in St. Lucia don't remember the name for anything in their African tongue.
  • Afolabe explains the importance of a name: It conveys a virtue and a hope for the child.
  • Achille says that he doesn't know what his name means and he doesn't care, he just accepts it.
  • Afolabe and the members of his tribe are not impressed. He tells Achille that his lack of interest in names threatens their existence.