28 pages 56 minutes read

Ferdinand Oyono

Houseboy

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 1956

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Important Quotes

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‘“Brother,’ he said. ‘Brother, what are we? What are we blackmen who are called French?”


(Prologue, Page 4)

Toundi asks this on his deathbed, signaling his confusion with his own identity and purpose in a world dominated by whites and subservient natives.

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“But for me, it is more than mourning. I have died my first death….”


(“After the Funeral”, Page 20)

Toundi underscores just what Father Gilbert meant to him by suggesting that he has died as well, almost Christ-like, at the death of the man who meant the most to him in the world.

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“I am not a storm. I am the thing that obeys.”


(“After the Funeral”, Page 22)

Toundi highlights the difference in demeanor and power between himself and the Commandant; the Commandant gets angry and rages, while Toundi must simply endure it and obey as a servant.

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