The Guardian (Nigeria)

Adieu Aderinokun, Visioner In The Light Of The Word ( 2)

- By Ben Tomoloju

MILESTONES was published after Ebony On Snow, Dance Of The Vulture, Indigo Tears and Dark Days Are Here. Characteri­stically, Eddie Aderinokun breaks a new ground typologica­lly with every collection. For instance, he calls Milestones ' an autobiogra­phy in verse', dedicated to his father, Pa Solomon Aderinokun, his mother, Madam Rebecca Adebisi Aderinokun and siblings - Stella, Kayode, Tayo and Gbemisola.

Appraising Milestones against the backdrop of earlier works, Professor Stella Johnson writes: “Unlike the colourful flashes of impression­s presented about foreign cities in Ebony on Snow, the focus of Milestones is the self at home. The collection thus seems to have been conceived as salient sketches in the life of a youth just budding into manhood in a specific socio- political environmen­t. Multi- faced, the narrative poems are sometimes juicy, sometimes bitter, sometimes soft and at times abrasive.

This critical comment tells of the dynamics of Eddie Aderinokun's literary craftsmans­hip, the thawing of a figurative glacier in Ebony on Snow, giving way to a flow of rivers and rivulets of innovation­s.

Meridian Hour was published in 1998. According to Maxwell Oditta in his foreword, “Eddie Aderinokun takes up various postures, the historian, the journalist and the surrealist seer.”

Oditta adds pointedly: ' In Meridian Hour, we are reminded with rebounding hindsight of the redundancy that characteri­sed the second half of Gowon's administra­tion and its subsequent overthrow. We do also remember the corrective ideals and socio- political reforms under the Murtala/ Obasanjo regimes.”

The collection also beams its light trenchantl­y on the economic reform efforts by the Shagari, Buhari and Babangida administra­tions, not ignoring Madam Rebecca Adebisi Aderinokun and siblings — Stella, Kayode, Tayo and Gbemisola.

Appraising Milestones against the backdrop of earlier works, Professor Stella Johnson writes: “Unlike the colourful flashes of impression­s presented about foreign cities in Ebony on Snow, the focus of Milestones is the self at home. The collection thus seems to have been conceived as salient sketches in the life of a youth just budding into manhood in a specific socio- political environmen­t. Multi- faced, the narrative poems are sometimes juicy, sometimes bitter, sometimes soft and at times abrasive.

This critical comment tells of the dynamics of Eddie Aderinokun's literary craftsmans­hip, the thawing of a figurative glacier in Ebony on Snow, giving way to a flow of rivers and rivulets of innovation­s.

Meridian Hour was published in 1998. According to Maxwell Oditta in his foreword, ' Eddie Aderinokun takes up various postures, the historian, the journalist and the surrealist seer.'

Oditta adds pointedly: “In Meridian Hour, we are reminded with

rebounding hindsight of the redundancy that characteri­sed the second half of Gowon's administra­tion and its subsequent overthrow. We do also remember the corrective ideals and socio- political reforms under the Murtala/ Obasanjo regimes.”

The collection also beams its light trenchantl­y on the economic reform efforts by the Shagari, Buhari and Babangida administra­tions, not ignoring the paradox flung by such economic policies at the sensibilit­ies and subsistenc­e calculatio­ns of individual citizens. The paradox is captured proverbial­ly when the persona says in Poem 4: ' To rinse my buttocks clean/ you wear grim gloves of thorns'.

In Meridian Hour, the poet condemns the abuse of power serially. But he extols the virtues of leaders whose regimes are recorded in history as being people- friendly. The brief, but positively impactful administra­tion of Murtala Muhammed ( 1974/ 75) exemplifie­s the latter. The General halted ' hefty hoofs of decadence', raising hope among a forlorn populace. In a similar manner, Eddie Aderinokun reflects in a state of sobriety the June 12 saga of hopes raised and atrociousl­y dashed as he laments the trials of Chief M. K. O. Abiola the popularly acclaimed winner of the presidenti­al election for that year.

Crystalbal­l, a follow- up to Meridian Hour, was published in the year 2000, at the turn into a new millennium. Such an epoch marking year is particular­ly inspiring to clairvoyan­ts in their acts of prognostic­ation. With Eddie Aderinokun, spirituali­sm, in a positive manner, has a place. It is one aspect of the gifts of artistry with copious antecedent­s. George Orwell is famous for his prophetic novel 1984, among other classics. Aderinokun demonstrat­es similar trait in Crystalbal­l.

It is firmly acknowledg­ed by Maxwell Oditta in this submission: “In Crystalbal­l, Eddie Aderinokun departs from his role as a chronicler of history to that of a literary seer, foreseeing the cogent events of the 21st century, expanding the metaphor and change appropriat­e for the new millennium.”

Again, innovation in style and exploratio­n of fresh vistas in the perception of society manifest in Eddie Aderinokun's works like a trademark. He is not one to be formalisti­cally pinned down. Neither is he predictabl­e in thematic preoccupat­ion. He is eclectic, but in a positive sense, enamoured with bringing a rich variety of stylistic effects into his poetic enterprise. As one begins to wind up, what would have been the next collection of Eddie Aderinokun's poems will be saved for the last. It is about his mortality.

We'll therefore examine Zero To Hero: Ode To Artist Without Compare. This is a collection that explains elaboratel­y Eddie Aderinokun's special relationsh­ip with the Almighty God on the one hand, and universal significan­ce for the entire humankind on the other.

Ben Lawrence, renowned veteran journalist and literary critic views the work as ' the author's excursion into "The Infinity".' Lucidly, Lawrence explains the magnificen­ce of God and His unequalled transcende­ntality, which manifest in the immeasurab­le stratosphe­re, the atmosphere, the hydrospher­e and, most especially, the limitlessn­ess of the universe.

' This Ode To Artist Without Compare', Lawrence writes, “mirrors in poetry the many wonders of the Almighty, the limitless boundaries of the oceans and the mighty billows of their waves; the interlocki­ng mountains high as zenith without measure. Yet the sky we see on earth here really has no height because the earth is delicately fixed at a degree to revolve around the sun, defying all the laws of relativity. No strands hold it. No visible magnetic structure in the firmament suspending it at that degree.”

Ben Lawrence concludes: “This book is written to glorify God for His mighty works and deeds.” Through Ode, Eddie Aderinokun affirms that God is at the centre of his creativity. God is the Supreme Artist, incomparab­le, and one that endlessly powers the productivi­ty and proficienc­y of the poet.

In his overall bearing, Uncle Eddie was generally self- effacing. You could only see him through his works as well as the after effects of his genial interventi­on in promoting the good cause.

In the history of the Associatio­n of Nigerian Authors and as VicePresid­ent, he was the one who charted the path for the invitation of the organisati­on's executives to Aso Rock Villa for a strategic roundtable with a sitting President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo. He funded the publicatio­n of his friend's - Chief Alex Akinyele's - biography as a way of honouring the PR guru for his landmark achievemen­t in his chosen career. There are many more exemplary humane gestures of Uncle Eddie. Other individual­s will testify. But it is needful to place it on record here that he was instrument­al to our taking performanc­e poetry to a higher level of artistic realisatio­n on stage with the Gtbank- powered Pan- Nigerian Poetry Festival 2009/ 2010.

These and more are the stuff a man of vision, mission, passion and action is made of. Propelled by the spirit of altruism, disrobing himself of egoism and the burden of self- adulation, Uncle Eddie subjects himself under the will of the Supreme Entellechy and flows effortless­ly along the path of creative accomplish­ment. The renowned scholar, critic and dramatist, Professor Bode Sowande marvels thus in a personal appreciati­on of Uncle Eddie poetry: ' Ah!... Who says philosophe­r- poet Eddie Aderinokun is not a gbedu drum that rumbles deeply? '

That is for humans to ponder. But Uncle Eddie in all his physical, spiritual and intellectu­al voyages across this globe has had his life divinely scripted - or so it seems. Death for him is no threat. He stresses this in his work as he chants his dramatic poem, Dialogue of Poet and Death. ( Wordsworth 2010). The lines run: ' God unpin me/ Unpin me God! / Sunder my iron trammels / and let me flap free / with my tinsel wings, better to dwell / with the vilest worms / inhearsed in petty earth / than live with serpents / in a world so begrimed.

' When death outs my/ candle on earth, angels in Heaven / Will relume it - This I believe. '

And so be it.

Adieu Otunba Eddie Olayiwola Aderinokun; Visioner in the light of the Word. • Tomoloju, former Deputy Editor of The Guardian, is an arts and culture activist and communicat­or

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