American Indian Trickster Tales (Myths and Legends) (44 page)

BOOK: American Indian Trickster Tales (Myths and Legends)
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After a while Raven called out from inside his burial box: “Lgum, is everybody gone?”
“No, master,” answered his slave, “there are still some people around. Be patient.” Then Lgum went into the chief’s house and ate up the best of the codfish. Raven tried to get out of the box, but he could not free himself because the lid was bound so tightly. After Lgum had eaten as much as he was able to, he untied the box and let Raven out, saying: “The people are gone now.” Raven noticed at once that the best of the codfish was gone and he guessed that Lgum had played a trick upon him. But he did not say anything. Raven and his slave stayed at that place until the rest of the codfish was gone. Then they left.
Raven and Lgum came to another village. Again Raven told his slave to announce the coming of a great chief—namely himself. Lgum went from house to house, shouting: “Oh, great tribe, do you know that a mighty chief is approaching? He is wearing wonderful ear ornaments of abalone shell. He is coming! He is here! Behold him!”
Then the whole tribe rushed to meet Raven and to honor him. The chief of this place invited Raven to partake of a feast. Raven and Lgum went into the chief’s house. He set before them rich food—broiled salmon, whale meat, and seal blubber. There was also a dish of mouth-watering crabapples.
Raven longed to eat this sweet delicacy, but Lgum told the chief: “My master has been sick lately. Eating these crabapples could kill him.”
Then the tribe’s chief said to Lgum: “In that case, you may eat them.”
Raven had to watch as Lgum ate up all the crabapples. He was very angry, but could not do anything about it. So he bided his time.
Raven took leave of the chief and his tribe. He wandered off, followed by Lgum. Raven walked ahead and his slave walked behind him.
They came to a deep canyon. It was so deep they could not see its bottom. Raven placed a dried-up skunk-cabbage stalk across the canyon to serve as a bridge. Raven walked across. Lgum was afraid. He said: “This bridge is not very sturdy.”
“This bridge is very strong,” Raven replied. “It could hold ten like you. It could hold a whale.”
Lgum walked onto the bridge. When he came to the middle of the skunk-cabbage stalk, it broke and Lgum tumbled down to his death. As he hit the canyon floor, his stomach burst open.
Raven swooped down after him. He said: “I made this man out of a rotten spruce stick and how has he thanked me? He cheated me and played tricks on me, but nobody cheats Raven and remains unpunished. So there he lies dead on the ground.” Raven saw that Lgum’s open stomach was filled with the best of the codfish, the broiled salmon, and the whale meat. He also saw the sweet crabapples. Raven smiled and ate up the contents of his dead slave’s stomach. Then he flew away, thinking: “What comes next?”
A LOUSY FISHERMAN
{
Haida
}
Yehl gives himself airs. He imitates the manners of those who are better and nobler than himself. He wants to be like them, but never succeeds.
Yehl was hopping along the river. He saw many salmon swimming upstream to their spawning grounds. He tried to grab them with his claws, but could not catch a single one. He tried to dive down upon them and spear them with his beak, but could not do it. He is a very bad fisherman. He is a bad provider. His wife is always hungry, but not as hungry as Yehl, who is always ravenous, who can never get enough.
Yehl said to himself: “Why tire myself out catching these nimble, leaping salmon? It is hard work. Let someone else do it.” He hopped and flew to the river’s mouth, where Eagle has his home. It took him quite a while to get there. He saw Eagle perched on top of a tall pine tree. He pretended not to see him. He pretend to be just accidentally passing by. He sang loudly, “Kaw, kaw, kaw,” in his rasping, croaking voice. Yehl was not a very good singer. He might not be a fine singer, but he was a loud one. He wanted Eagle to notice him. He knew that Eagle was a very generous person who would never let a wanderer pass by him without inviting the stranger to share his meal.
It went as Yehl had planned it. Eagle heard Yehl’s kawing and croaking. He looked down and saw the raven hopping along below him. “Good day, friend,” Eagle called down from his perch. “Come to the house and have something to eat.”
“If you insist,” said Yehl.
They both went into the house. Eagle’s wife was serving smoked salmon. It was delicious. Yehl wolfed down the food. He gorged himself. He stuffed himself so that his belly’s weight made him unable to fly. He could not even hop. He had to take a long rest, digesting all this food, before he could finally take his leave. Yehl had eaten so much that he barely left a mouthful for his hosts, who were too polite to comment upon it.
Saying good-bye, Yehl wanted to show Eagle what a big fellow he was. “I, too, am a great fisherman,” he told Eagle. “I, too, am generous. I invite you and your good wife to dine with me tomorrow. I shall also invite many friends. It will be a feast to be remembered for years.”
The next evening the guests arrived, including Eagle and his wife. Yehl’s wife already had a fire going, but the Raven had not caught a single salmon. All day he had tried to get one, without success. “These fish are too fast,” he said to himself, “they leap, and jump, and wiggle. How can one catch fish like these? I need a big, fat, and very slow one.”
Then Yehl saw a whirlpool forming in the river, and below it a huge, dark fish who seemed not to move at all. “That’s the one for me!” cried Yehl. He dove down with all his might to spear this big salmon with his beak. But as he crashed into that huge, dark fish, it turned out to be a rock! It broke Yehl’s beak and knocked him senseless. He floated down the river and would have drowned had Eagle not seen his mishap. Eagle swooped down, grabbed Yehl by the scruff of his neck, and carried him to safety.
Back at his house, when Yehl came to, his beak hurt badly and he croaked with pain. His wife tied up his broken beak. The guests departed hungry, without having eaten even the tiniest bit of fish. Eagle remarked: “I don’t think Yehl is as great a fisherman as he claims to be.” Yehl’s sense of self-esteem suffered for a while—but not for long.
RAVEN LIGHTS THE WORLD
{
Tlingit
}
Raven was there first. He had been told to make the world by his father, but we do not know who this father was or how he looked. There was no light at that long-ago time, a time of beginning. Raven knew that far away in the North was a house in which someone kept light just for himself. Raven schemed, thinking of how best to steal the light to illuminate the world.
Light’s owner had a beautiful daughter. Raven made himself into a small piece of we know not what. The girl swallowed it and it made her pregnant. When she was about to give birth, her father scooped out a hole in the earth and lined it with moss. Squatting above it, the girl brought forth a baby boy whose eyes were very bright and sparkling. After some time the baby began crawling around. There were some bags hanging on the wall. The baby cried and cried. His grandfather said: “He wants one of the bags. Give him the one at the end, the nearest one.” The baby rolled the bag around. It opened. It was full of stars. The stars flew up into the sky through the smoke hole and settled in their appointed places. That was why that baby was born. It kept crying. So they gave him another bag. Little boy rolled it around and it opened. Out flew moon, ascending into the sky through the smoke hole.
There was one bag left. It contained daylight. The baby boy kept crying. His grandfather said: “Give him the last one.” The baby seized it and uttered the Raven cry: “Gaah.” It took on the form of Raven and, clutching the bag, flew out through the smoke hole. The baby was Raven who had reborn himself.
Raven traveled on. He knew that Petrel had a spring that never dried up. Petrel guarded it jealously. He kept a lid on it. He wanted to keep its water for himself. There was, at that time, no water in the world, not a single drop of it. Raven went to visit Petrel. Raven said: “Brother, I have been wandering all day. I am tired. I think I will stay with you overnight.”
“Well, all right,” said Petrel. He kept an eye on his spring.
“Let’s go outside and watch the moon,” said Raven.
“I never go outside,” said Petrel.
They went to sleep. Raven only pretended to be dozing. As soon as he heard Petrel snoring, he got some dog dung from the outside and smashed it all over Petrel’s buttocks. In the morning Raven told Petrel: “Brother, you have beshitted yourself.” Petrel believed him. He went outside to clean himself with moss. As soon as Petrel was outside, Raven uncovered the spring and drank it dry. He cried, “Gaah,” and tried to fly away through the smoke hole. He got stuck there.
Petrel built a fire underneath the smoke hole. “You are a thief,” he cried. “I will bum you up.” Up to this time Raven had been white. The smoke and the fire, which singed his feathers, turned him black. He has remained black ever since.
At last, Raven managed to squeeze himself through the smoke hole. He had not dropped any of the water. He flew through the air and let water fall down from his beak. Thus he made the oceans and the great rivers. When Raven had only a few drops left he used them to make lakes and ponds. When he had finished he cried, “Gaah.”
Raven traveled on. The world was still dark, because he had kept his daylight bag closed. He came to a village full of different kinds of beings. Raven opened his bag just a little to give them a bit of light, but they all cried: “Stop, you are blinding us!” Raven got angry and opened the bag all the way. Then sun jumped out and flew up into the sky. His brightness frightened the village people. Those of them who wore scales and seals or otter skins jumped into the ocean. Those with the skins of land creatures ran off into the woods. So now there were sea animals and land animals. Raven cried, “Gaah,” and traveled on.
Raven found a piece of jade. He made a beautiful ax out of it. Ever since people have made pretty things out of jade. Raven saw Salmon swimming in the water. He called out to the fish: “Brother, come here.” Salmon did not trust Raven. He did not come. Raven said to Jade: “Tell Salmon to come!” Then Raven hid himself. Jade called to the big fish: “You fellow with the slimy back and the filthy gills, come over here!” Salmon swam to the shore. Raven came out of hiding, cried, “Gaah,” and killed Salmon with his jade club.
Raven flew along with his big fish. He got all kinds of birds, big and small, to perform all sorts of tasks for him. He told them, “Friends, go get some skunk cabbage.” They brought it. “This is a good place for cooking,” Raven told the birds. He put the salmon in a pit lined with skunk cabbage, and put hot coals on top of it. “Get some more skunk cabbage from beyond that mountain. When you come back the fish will be done.” The birds did as they were told. While they were gone, Raven dug up the salmon and ate it. When the birds came back, Raven said, “Let’s dig up the fish and see whether it’s done.” They dug, but there was nothing left but the bones. “How could this have happened?” said Raven. “It puzzles me. But, friends, I will do something for you.” Then Raven gave every bird something different—a color, a crest, a longer or shorter tail, a straight or hooked beak. Then he named them. So now we have all these birds. When he was finished, Raven cried, “Gaah,” and flew off.
Raven journeyed on. He encountered Bear and Cormorant. “Friends,” he said, “let’s go fishing. I know a place where we can find much halibut.” Cormorant had a canoe. They got in. Raven sat at the stern. “I will steer,” he said, “because I know the spot where the halibut are.” Bear sat in the middle. Cormorant seated himself at the bow, acting as a lookout.
Bear asked: “What shall we use for bait?”
“I will find something,” Raven answered. When Bear was not looking, Raven quickly cut off his testicles with one swoop of his copper knife. Bear died instantly. Raven used Bear’s testicles for bait. They caught many halibut. They paddled the canoe back to shore.
“Brother,” said Raven to Cormorant, “you have a louse crawling on your head. Open your beak wide and I will put the louse in for you to eat.” When Cormorant opened his beak, Raven reached inside and tore Cormorant’s tongue out. He did this so that Cormorant could not tell Bear’s wife what had happened. So from that time on Cormorant cannot speak. He can only make a gurgling sound.

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