Unoka atone his mistakes by bringing a she-goat and hen, a length of cloth and a hundred cowries to shrine of Ani to apologize for expressing his anger to his youngest wife, Ojiugo.
Glimpsing at his children’s future Okonkwo acts abusive and bitter, unsatisfied and hysterical, fearful and malevolent, as he desecrate them to ensure they are successful.
Unoka can be describe as a negative person- lazy and failure, alcoholic and debtful, coward and fearful- which led him have amiss burial when he dies.
With the help of Nwakibie, Okonkwo become rich in wealth and human, barns and houses, farms and yams despite all this possessions, he incipients new things. …show more content…
When the banana tree is dead, wives of Okonkwo were tentative- his patience was tentative, his cells were tentative, his anger was tentative- no one could settle the situation.
Okonkwo has tremendous yams, yet still use the leftover yam seeds- the seeds for prosperity, the seeds of harvest, the seeds of labor- Okonkwo then uses the 800 seeds in his copious farms.
Working in a yam farm requires a lot of deft people- people who are punctual, people who are hard-working, people who are clever - Okonkwo is one of these people.
Ikemefuna lives at Okonkwo’s house haggard fearful facial expression- haggard insecurity, haggard hatred- his life was despair until he knows Nwoye.
A wealthy farmer, an old man, a father of 30 children- expedient for his farm labor- this will save him a lot of