Eskimo Folk Tales Part 23
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But two of them took Navaranapaluk and hurried off with her.
And she, thinking that both wished to have her to wife, cried out:
"Which is it to be? Which is it to be?"
The men laughed, and made no answer, but ran on with her.
Then suddenly they cut through both her arms with their knives. And soon she fell, and the blood went from her, and she died.
This fate they meted out to her because she lied.
KaGSSAGSSUK, THE HOMELESS BOY WHO BECAME A STRONG MAN
One day, it is said, when the men and women in the place had gone to a spirit calling, the children were left behind, all in one big house, where they played, making a great noise.
A homeless boy named Kagssagssuk was walking about alone outside, and it is said that he called to those who were playing inside the house, and said:
"You must not make so much noise, or the Great Fire will come."
The children, who would not believe him, went on with their noisy play, and at last the Great Fire appeared. Little Kagssagssuk fled into the house, and cried:
"Lift me up. I must have my gloves, and they are up there!"
So they lifted him up to the drying frame under the roof.
And then they heard the Great Fire come hurrying into the house from without. He had a great live ribbon seal for a whip, and that whip had long claws. And then he began dragging the children out through the pa.s.sage with his great whip, and each time he drew one out, that one was frizzled up. And at last there were no more. But before going away, the Great Fire reached up and touched with his finger a skin which was hanging on the drying frame.
As soon as the Great Fire had gone away, little Kagssagssuk crawled down from the drying frame and went over to the people who were gathered in the wizard's house, and told them what had happened. But none believed what he said.
"You have killed them yourself," they declared.
"Very well, then," he said, "if you think so, try to make a noise yourselves, like the children did."
And now they began cooking blubber above the entrance to the house, and when the oil was boiling and bubbling as hard as it could, they began making a mighty noise. And true enough, up came the Great Fire outside.
But little Kagssagssuk was not allowed to come into the house, and therefore he hid himself in the store shed. The Great Fire came into the house, and brought with it the live ribbon seal for a whip. They heard it coming in through the pa.s.sage, and then they poured boiling oil over it, and his whip being thus destroyed, the Great Fire went away.
But from that time onward, all the people of the village were unkind to little Kagssagssuk, and that although he had told the truth. Up to that time he had lived in the house of Umerdlugtoq, who was a great man, but now he was forced to stay outside always, and they would not let him come in. If he ventured to step in, though it were for no more than to dry his boots, Umerdlugtoq, that great man, would lift him up by the nostrils, and cast him over the high threshold again.
And little Kagssagssuk had two grandmothers; the one of these beat him as often as she could, even if he only lay out in the pa.s.sage. But his other grandmother took pity on him, because he was the son of her daughter, who had been a woman like herself, and therefore she dried his clothes for him.
When, once in a while, that unfortunate boy did come in, Umerdlugtoq's folk would give him some tough walrus hide to eat, wis.h.i.+ng only to give him something which they knew was too tough for him. And when they did so, he would take a little piece of stone and put it between his teeth, to help him, and when he had finished, put it back in his breeches, where he always kept it. When he was hungry, he would sometimes eat of the dogs' leavings on the ground outside, finding there walrus hide which even the dogs refused to eat.
He slept among the dogs, and warmed himself up on the roof, in the warm air from the smoke hole. But whenever Umerdlugtoq saw him warming himself there, he would haul him down by the nostrils.
Thus a long time pa.s.sed, and it had been dark in the winter, and was beginning to grow light near the coming of spring. And now little Kagssagssuk began to go wandering about the country. Once when he was out, he met a big man, a giant, who was cutting up his catch, and on seeing him, Kagssagssuk cried out in a loud voice:
"Ho, you man there, give me a piece of that meat!"
But although he shouted as loudly as he could, that giant could not hear him. At last a little sound reached the big man's ears, and then he said:
"Bring me luck, bring me luck!"
And he threw down a little piece of meat on the ground, believing it was one of the dead who thus asked.
But little Kagssagssuk, who, young as he was, had already some helping spirits, made that little piece of meat to be a big piece, just as the dead can do, and ate as much as he could, and when he could eat no more, there was still so much left that he could hardly drag it away to hide it.
Some time after this, little Kagssagssuk said to his mother's mother:
"I have by chance become possessed of much meat, and my thoughts will not leave it. I will therefore go out and look to it."
So he went off to the place where he had hidden it, and lo! it was not there. And he fell to weeping, and while he stood there weeping, the giant came up.
"What are you weeping for?"
"I cannot find the meat which I had hidden in a store-place here."
"Ho," said the giant, "I took that meat. I thought it had belonged to another one."
And then he said again: "Now let us play together." For he felt kindly towards that boy, and had pity on him.
And they two went off together. When they came to a big stone, the giant said: "Now let us push this stone." And they began pus.h.i.+ng at the big stone until they twirled it round. At first, when little Kagssagssuk tried, he simply fell backwards.
"Now once more. Make haste, make haste, once more. And there again, there is a bigger one."
And at last little Kagssagssuk ceased to fall over backwards, and was able instead to move the stones and twirl them round. And each time he tried with a larger stone than before, and when he had succeeded with that, a larger one still. And so he kept on. And at last he could make even the biggest stones twirl round in the air, and the stone said "leu-leu-leu-leu" in the air.
Then said the giant at last, seeing that they were equal in strength:
"Now you have become a strong man. But since it was by my fault that you lost that piece of meat, I will by magic means cause bears to come down to your village. Three bears there will be, and they will come right down to the village."
Then little Kagssagssuk went home, and having returned home, went up to warm himself as usual at the smoke hole. Then came the master of that house, as usual, and hauled him down by the nostrils. And afterwards, when he went to lie down among the dogs, his wicked grandmother beat him and them together, as was her custom. Altogether as if there were no strong man in the village at all.
But in the night, when all were asleep, he went down to one of the umiaks, which was frozen fast, and hauled it free.
Next morning when the men awoke, there was a great to-do.
"Hau! That umiak has been hauled out of the ice!"
"Hau! There must be a strong man among us!"
"Who can it be that is so strong?"
Eskimo Folk Tales Part 23
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Eskimo Folk Tales Part 23 summary
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