JO Morrow was done with the Grade-II thing, so he took the teaching line.
He just wanted to stay quiet and earn. So he got a teaching job with the government, and then left home.
Joshua knew too well that he’d got little or no share in his father’s farm. As anyone should dub him ‘heartless’ if he struggled with his brother.
But it wasn’t that Dekomi could do farm work.
But he’d got a proper town to feed, for he raised eight children...
So, the Abrahams must own the farms.
Therefore Dekomi moved his whole household from town to the village. And there he managed the farm lot.
Bamiji left home and all that was there, and taught school.
It was the last years of colonists and Mr J. Morrow was made Village Headmaster by the foreign rule. It was in a district of Ibadan.
But then the times changed as 1960 came—a colony became a country; Nigeria, a sovereign nation.
It was 1960.
Then that year before it ran out, schools were re-named ‘Modern Schools’. And even that year Joshua moved upward...
A grade two headmaster was made a high school teacher; then from town to town, he taught schools and moved up still.
Then, he prospered and bought a piano – the classic wood-framed one.
He prospered so much he dared to dream high.
Yes, he thought to go to university and study literature. Do a bit of religious study, as well.
So he took the entry and passed. It was ‘GCE’ in those days—like GED.
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