Moonlight pooled in a hollow where dry reeds trembled; a small, wet face glimmered under the grass as the Egbere wept, its mat clutched to a chest that rose and fell with quiet sobs. The night smelled of smoke and river mud, and every animal held its breath as if the bush itself feared what might happen next.
Beyond the sun-baked marketplaces and the drum-scented nights of Yoruba country, in the liminal place where farm tracks fray into scrub and moonlight pools in hollows, there is said to live a curious thing called the Egbere. It appears like a small child, knees tucked under a frayed cloth, cheeks wet with ceaseless tears, and always clutching a mat—woven low and close, yellowing with age and smelling faintly of smoke and river reeds. Elders whisper that the Egbere never grows, that it is neither wholly spirit nor merely creature, and that its crying is a riddle carried by the wind. Some say the spirit keeps its mat to shelter memories, others insist it hides a promise.
The strangest claim passes quietly from mouth to mouth across many compound fires: if a person can take the Egbere's mat without waking it, wealth will follow. But the story rarely ends with simple fortune—covetous hands find themselves tested by a tradition of rules, debts paid in strange coin. This retelling gathers voices, rituals, and the soft terror and tenderness bound to the Egbere's presence. It navigates paths where the living and the unseen meet, where curiosity inches toward temptation, and where communities decide whether cunning or compassion is the truer measure of prosperity. Listening closely to the crook of that tear-sound—like folded leaves rubbing together—you might feel the old counsel: some treasures are heavy, and some gifts ask for more than gold.
Origins and Omens: How the Egbere Came to Weep
In the thick-tongued memory of the countryside, origin stories of the Egbere vary like braided reeds. Some elders trace the spirit to a child left behind after a famine—so small that it was thought a doll, so hungry its wails braided into the night. Others insist the Egbere predates human sorrow, born from a torn promise between the river and the forest: an agreement that animals would have crossing places and humans would leave offerings; when the pact was broken the Egbere emerged as a living question. Both versions and many more swirl through the telling, and each retelling adds a bead to the community’s shared necklace of meaning.
The most persistent detail—consistent as the moon’s phases—is the mat. Woven by human hands, humble and durable, the mat is both object and symbol. Some say it was once a blanket for a newborn, folded over small ribs, a mortal thing that carried warmth. Others will tell you that the mat is a ledger—rows of woven knots that record favors owed to the spirit. Where stories differ they agree: the Egbere will not part from its mat.
Ancient omens accompany sightings. Dogs go silent; goats refuse to enter the shade; a furnace’s coals will die for no good reason. Farmers cross themselves and mutter when they pass the scrub where reed and bramble shelter the Egbere's chosen ground. Even in markets—where rumor spreads quickest—an old woman will test the mood by plucking a kernel of corn and rolling it between thumb and palm, as if feeling for invisible thread.
Children, whose imaginations are still wide as the sky, sometimes run to the bushes with bowls of leftover porridge, curious and brave. The Egbere rewards and punishes curiosity in odd measures: occasionally the child-spirit will accept offerings and slide away into the dark, leaving a fine coin in the bowl or a sprig of unusual herbs that will cure a fever. More often, the spirit will weep harder, and mischief follows: yams will sprout holes, a pot will crack for no reason, or a man will misplace the exact seed he needs for next season. Those were the small debts.
There are also tales where the mat is the source of the spirit’s power. Gathered in the pattern of its weave are stories, names, and songs—strings of memory that grant the Egbere a weird sovereignty among minor spirits. When a traveling hunter once claimed he would take the mat, the story says he hid near the bush and waited until the Egbere slept.
He reached out with a hand hardened by arrow shafts and sweat, and as his fingers closed around the warm reed the earth gave a small sigh. The hunter stumbled home laden with a sack that seemed to fill with coins overnight, yet his children began to cry at dusk. Wealth had found him, yes, but it was purchased with a new, inexplicable sorrow: the voices of his offspring kept changing pitch, and they would not laugh at the same things, as if some tiny part of mirth had been rewoven into the mat and left behind. The hunter’s name is told as a caution: gain that costs laughter may be no gain at all.
There is ritual around the Egbere that survives because communities have an appetite for balancing risk and reward. If someone seeks to profit from a stolen mat—if greed outpaces caution—elders will insist on a vetting process as careful as curing a sickle wound. The would-be taker must confess the desire publicly, present offerings to the elders, and sometimes sleep in the shrine of their lineage for three nights. The ceremony blends superstition and social control: it ensures the community knows who is making the move, and it measures whether a person’s motives are honorable or merely selfish.
That ritual does more than secure fortune; it protects harmony. In one famous telling, a neighbor who had obeyed all the rules stole the mat because he truly intended to pay back lost debts to widows and to mend a common well. After he stole the mat and kept it wrapped in a clay pot, rice and money began to appear on his doorstep at dawn—gifts from those he had helped in the near future as if fate, oddly grateful, had both rewarded and recorded his generosity. The story insists that not all theft is the same; intention weighs heavier than stealth in the ledger of the Egbere.
Yet the law of the spirit is capricious. Another tale warns that any who attempt to profit by deceiving the Egbere will meet a clever, slow undoing: crops that were once green will yellow in a pattern that looks like the mat’s weave; coins will accumulate in a house but never enough to buy relief; the person will become a master of small inconveniences, forever tripping on thresholds, forever short of the one needed tool. Elders use these stories to teach a broader lesson: community wealth is not simple accumulation. Beneath the surface of a 'get-rich-quick' yarn, the Egbere stories stitch together a social fabric where prosperity is meaningful only when it repairs and sustains relationships. In that sense the crying spirit functions as a poetic kind of balance—punishing those who hollow out communal trust, blessing those who plant into it.
Beyond the practical morals, the Egbere also embodies grief and remembrance. Many households keep a small mat rolled in a back room—a relic, a reminder of generosity once extended to a stranger. Mothers sometimes touch a torn strip of cloth and tell their children about the Egbere as both lullaby and lesson: be kind to the lost, protect the small, and remember what belongs to others.
In some villages, the Egbere's presence explains unaccountable sorrows: an unexpected stillbirth, a lonely widower’s recurring dreams. People find comfort in the thought that these small tragedies are held by a spirit who weeps for what was broken between humans and the land. The legend thus becomes less about the accumulation of wealth and more about the way a society accounts for care. The mat is not only object and ledger; it is a map of obligations, a subtle geography of favors owed and remembered.
Finally, the Egbere's image resists being wholly tamed by explanation. In the storyteller's cadence there is always a pause where the tale will admit its own incompleteness; one cannot fully translate the quiet of a bush at night, the way the air feels when something small and profound is sorrowing near your path. The Egbere persists because it answers a particular human need: a place to put small mysteries, to ask why misfortune and unexpected bounty visit in uneven measures. Its plaintive tears make space for confession, for secrecy, for the private bargains people make when they think no one is watching. For whoever listens, the spirit offers a single, slippery truth: some things must be acknowledged rather than solved, held rather than owned.


















