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VII. The Young Man who was Saved by a
Rabbit and a Fox. (Passamaquoddy.) There dwelt a couple in the
woods, far away from other people, — a man and his wife. They had one boy, who
grew up strong and clever. One day he said, "Father and mother, let me go
and see other men and women." They grieved, but let him go. He went afar. All night he
lay on the ground. In the morning he heard something coming. He rose and saw it
was a Rabbit, who said, "Ha, friend, where go you?" The boy answered,
"To find people." "That is what I want," replied the
Rabbit. "Let us go together." So they went on for a long
time, till they heard voices far off, and walking quietly came to a village.
"Now," said the Rabbit, "steal up unseen, and listen to
them!" The boy did so, and heard the people saying that a kewahqu',
a cannibal monster, was to come the next day to devour the daughter of their
sagamore. And having returned and reported this to the Rabbit, the latter said
to the boy, "Have no fear; go to the people and tell them that you can
save her." He did so, but it was long before they would listen to him. Yet
at last it came to the ears of the old chief that a strange young man insisted
that he could save the girl; so the chief sent for him, and said, "They
tell me that you think you can deliver my daughter from death. Do so, and she
shall be yours." Then he returned to the
Rabbit, who said, "They did not send the girl far away because they know
that the demon can follow any track. But I hope to make a track which he cannot
follow. Now do you, as soon as it shall be dark, bring her to this place."
The young man did so, and the Rabbit was there with a sled, and in his hand he
had two squirrels. These he smoothed down, and as he did so they grew to be as
large as the largest sled-dogs. Then all three went headlong, like the wind,
till they came to another village. The Rabbit looked about till
he found a certain wigwam, and then peered through a crevice into it.
"This is the place," he said. "Enter." They did so; then
the Rabbit ran away. They found in the cabin an old woman, who was very kind,
but who, on seeing them, burst into tears. "Ah, my dear
grandchildren,"8 she cried, "your death is following you
rapidly, for the kewahqu' is on your track, and will soon be here. But run down
to the river, where you will find your grandfather camping." They went, and were joined
by the Rabbit, who had spent the time in making many divergent tracks in the
ground. The kewahqu' came. The tracks delayed him a long time, but at last he
found the right one. Meanwhile the young couple went on, and found an old man
by the river. He said, "Truly you are in great danger, for the kewahqu' is
coming. But I will help you." Saying this, he threw himself into the
water, where he floated with outstretched limbs, and said, "Now, my
children, get on me." The girl feared lest she should fall off, but being
reassured mounted, when he turned into a canoe, which carried them safely
across. But when they turned to look at him, lo! he was no longer a canoe, but
an old Duck. "Now, my dear children," he said, "hasten to the
top of yonder old mountain, high among the gray rocks. There you will find your
friend." They fled, to the old gray mountain. The kewahqu' came raging and
roaring in a fury, but however he pursued they were at the foot of the
precipice before him. There stood the Rabbit. He
was holding up a very long pole; no pine was ever longer. "Climb
this," he said. And, as they climbed, it lengthened, till they left it for
the hill, and then scrambled up the rocks. Then the kewahqu' came yelling and
howling horribly. Seeing the fugitives far above, he swarmed up the pole. With
him, too, it grew, and grew rapidly, till it seemed to be half a mile high. Now
the kewahqu' was no such sorcerer that he could fly; neither had he wings; he
must remain on the pole; and when he came to the top the young man pushed it
afar. It fell, and the monster was killed by the fall thereof. They went with the
squirrel-sledge; they flew through the woods on the snow by the moonlight; they
were very glad. And at last they came to the girl's village, when the Rabbit
said, "Now, friend, good-by. Yet there is more trouble coming, and when it
is with you I and mine will aid you. So farewell." And when they were home
again it all appeared like a dream. Then the wedding feast was held, and all
seemed well. But the young men of the
village hated the youth, and desired to kill him, that they might take his
wife. They persuaded him to go with them fishing on the sea. Then they raised a
cry, and said, "A whale is chasing us! he is under the canoe!" and
suddenly they knocked him overboard, and paddled away like an arrow in flight. The young man called for
help. A Crow came, and said, "Swim or float as long as you can. I will
bring you aid." He floated a long time. The Crow returned with a strong
cord; the Crow made himself very large; he threw one end of the cord to the
youth; by the other he towed him to a small island. "I can do no
more," he said; "but there is another friend." So as the youth
sat there, starving and freezing, there came to him a Fox. "Ha,
friend," he said, "are you here?" "Yes," replied the
youth, "and dying of hunger." The Fox reflected an instant, and said,
"Truly I have no meat; and yet there is a way." So he picked from the
ground a blade of dry grass, and bade the youth eat it. He did so, and found
himself a moose (or a horse). Then he fed richly on the young grass till
he had enough, when the Fox gave him a second straw, and he became a man again.
"Friend," said the Fox, "there is an Indian village on the
main-land, where there is to be a great feast, a grand dance. Would you like to
be there?" "Indeed I would," replied the youth. "Then wait
till dark, and I will take you there," said the Fox. And when night came
he bade the youth close his eyes and enter the river, and take hold of the end
of his tail, while he should draw. So in the tossing sea they went on for
hours. Thought the youth, "We shall never get there." Said
the Fox, "Yes, we will, but keep your eyes shut." So it went on for
another hour, when the youth thought again, "We shall never reach
land." Said the Fox, "Yes, we shall." However, after a
time he opened his eyes, when they were only ten feet from the shore, and this
cost them more time and trouble than all the previous swim ere they had the
beach under foot. It was his own village. The
festival was for the marriage of his own wife to one of the young men who had
pushed him overboard. Great was his magic power, great was his anger; he became
strong as death. Then he went to his own wigwam, and his wife, seeing him,
cried aloud for joy, and kissed him and wept all at once. He said, "Be
glad, but the hour of punishment for the men who made these tears is
come." So he went to the sagamore and told him all. The old chief called for the
young men. "Slay them all as you choose," he said to his son-in-law;
"scalp them." But the youth refused. He called to the Fox, and got
the straws which gave the power to transform men to beasts. He changed his
enemies into bad animals, — one into a porcupine, one into a hog, — and they
were driven into the woods. Thus it was that the first hog and the first
porcupine came into the world. This story, narrated by Tomah Josephs, is partly old Indian and partly European, but whether the latter element was derived from a French Canadian or a Norse source I cannot tell, since it is common to both. The mention of the horse and the hog, or of cattle, does not prove that a story is not pre-Columbian. The Norsemen had brought cattle of various descriptions even to New England. It is to be very much regretted that the first settlers in New England took no pains to ascertain what the Indians knew of the white men who had preceded them. But modern material may have easily been added to an old legend _______________________
8 The terms grandchildren, grandmother,
etc., do not here signify actual relationship, but only friendship between
elderly and young people. |