|
And so also did the People of Winter, or
the People of the North. Some were known as the Bear people, or the
Coyote people, or Deer people; others as the Crane people, Turkey
people, or Grouse people. So the Badger people dwelt in a warm place,
even as the badgers on the sunny side of hills burrow, finding a
dwelling amongst the dry roots whence is fire.
The Men of the Early Times
Eight years was but four days and four nights when the world was new.
It was while such days and nights continued that men were led out, in
the night-shine of the World of Seeing. For even when they saw the
great star, they thought it the Sun-father himself, it so burned their
eye-balls.
Men and creatures were more alike then than now. Our fathers were
black, like the caves they came from; their skins were cold and scaly
like those of mud creatures; their eyes were goggled like an owl's;
their ears were like those of cave bats; their feet were webbed like
those of walkers in wet and soft places; they had tails, long or
short, as they were old or young. Men crouched when they walked, or
crawled along the ground like lizards. They feared to walk straight,
but crouched as before time they had in their cave worlds, that they
might not stumble or fall in the uncertain light.
When the morning star arose, they blinked excessively when they beheld
its brightness and cried out that now surely the Father was coming.
But it was only the elder of the Bright Ones, heralding with his
shield of flame the approach of the Sun-father. And when, low down in
the east, the Sun-father himself appeared, though shrouded in the mist
of the world-waters, they were blinded and heated by his light and
glory. They fell down wallowing and covered their eyes with their
hands and arms, yet ever as they looked toward the light, they
struggled toward the Sun as moths and other night creatures seek the
light of a camp fire. Thus they became used to the light. But when
they rose and walked straight, no longer bending, and looked upon each
other, they sought to clothe themselves with girdles and garments of
bark and rushes. And when by walking only upon their hinder feet they
were bruised by stone and sand, they plaited sandals of yucca fibre.
April, 2005 |
|