preview

The Return

Decent Essays

In the story, “The Return” by Ngugi wa Thiong’o, Kamau’s bundle effectively symbolizes selfishness and bitterness. The bundle that Kamau carries with him throughout the story represents everything that he desires to return home to. He wishes to return to his family, friends, wife, and village with little to no change in how he left them. However, things are not the same at all because his wife and family have left him and believe that he is dead. It is not until the river sweeps away the bundle that he asks himself, “‘Why should she have waited for me? Why should all the changes have waited for my return?’” (Thiong’o 139). This quote shows that Kamau finally realizes that his absence was not centered around him, and his family had to carry …show more content…

It also contains things that remind him of his wife who later leaves him; these bitter memories serve as the reason Kamau is so bitter towards life. The river sweeps away these feelings when the bundle falls into the river and floats away and Kamau, “felt relieved. Thoughts of drowning himself dispersed” (Thiong’o 139). Kamau needs this in order to move on from his past and hatred towards the changes and losses he returns to. The bundle is an effective symbol because Kamau talks about it often and how he has had it since he left the village. He also talks of how it contains everything that reminds him of his wife, and also about how at peace he feels when the bundle and its bearing meanders down the …show more content…

The detainees in Ngugi wa Thiong’o’s “The Return” feelings toward the people and villages they left behind are longing. All of the other prisoners in the camp talk about home all the time, including Kamau. However, one day Njoroge, a fellow detainee, stops his work longing for his pregnant wife that he left behind. He knows not of where she is or what has become of his child. Another prisoner talks of leaving his wife and child saying that, “‘We were all happy. But on the same day, I was arrested…’” (Thiong’o 137). This quote is important because it shows the prisoner left behind happiness, and longs for that feeling as well as the presence of his family. The detainees can hardly wait for their release to go home because on this day, “life [will] begin anew” (Thiong’o 137). It is this day that the detainees long for; they miss their family and friends so much, but they know that when the time comes they will soon see them. Not only do the prisoners miss their family, but they also miss their homes and villages. At this point the detainees are living in poor and brutal conditions, and miss the warmth and comfort of their familiar residence. The prisoner's’ feelings are longing for the people and places they were forced to leave behind when they were taken

Get Access