We have changed our privacy policy. In addition, we use cookies on our website for various purposes. By continuing on our website, you consent to our use of cookies. You can learn about our practices by reading our privacy policy.

Omeros Chapter XLVIII Summary

i

  • The narrator has some revelations about his relationship experiences—perhaps unsurprisingly at this point, they're not particularly comforting.
  • He confesses that he's abandoned his children and lost marriages, perhaps because he'd rather hone his "craft" (by which he means his poetry writing skillz).
  • We move back to Ma Kilman and her search for Philoctete's cure. See, a major part of her problem is that she learned the Christian names for the herbs, and because of this, doesn't know their true names.
  • In other words, her practice of Catholicism dulled the old gods in her blood. But now she calls to them to reveal the proper herbs to her.

ii

  • Ma Kilman is transfigured back to her true nature: the African sibyl or obeah woman. She liberates herself from her wig.
  • She listens to the ants, which are speaking the language of her ancestors; somehow she understands them.
  • And she prays in this new/old language to heal Philoctete's wound.
  • Just like that, in his bed, Philoctete begins to feel the healing effects of her efforts.

iii

  • Ma Kilman comes out of the woods; Seven Seas senses her as she passes.