Of the Dreadful Deeds of the
Evil
Pitcher, who was both Man and Woman, and how she fell in love with
Glooskap,
and, being scorned, became his Enemy. Of the Toads and Porcupines, and
the
Awful Battle of the Giants.
(Passamaquoddy.)
When Glooskap came into the
world it abounded in giants, monsters, sorcerers and witches, fiends
and
devils. Among the witches there was, one whom the Passamaquoddy call
Pook-jin-skwess, or the Pitcher.18 And
they have a legend that she once fell in
love with Glooskap when he was young and had not gained the power of
his riper
age. He fled before her, and she pursued him. It was a dreadful flight,
since
to make rapid steps both took the form of giants by their m'-te-oulin
(P.), or magic power. It was like an awful storm in winter, the wind
chasing
the cloud; it was like a frightful tempest in summer, the lightning
chasing the
thunder. As the snow lay deep, both had snow-shoes on. When they came
to the
shore Glooskap leaped from the main-land to the island of Grand Manan,19
and so escaped her. Now the snow-shoes of Glooskap were sams'ook
(P.),
or round, while those of Pook-jin-skwess were long and pointed,20
and
the marks of them as they jumped are to be seen deep in the rocks to
this day.
When Glooskap came to the
camp, which was at Ogumkegeak (M.), now called Liverpool, he found no
one. But
there lay the witch-kwed-lakun-cheech (M.), or birch-bark dish
of
Martin, and from it, or, as another legend states, from an old man and
woman
who dwelt hard by, he learned that Win-pe and the families had been
gone for
seven years, along a road guarded by wicked and horrible beings, placed
by
Win-pe to prevent the Great Master from finding him. For it was a great
triumph
for him to keep Glooskap's friends as slaves, and all the land spoke
thereof.
And these monsters were
Pook-jin-skwess, or the Evil Pitcher herself, in many forms; for she
could be
man or woman,21 or many of them, and also several girls,
when she
willed it. Now it is a great part of Indian m'teoulin (P.) to
know what
one's enemies are planning and plotting, and all their tricks and
darkened
paths; and in this Glooskap went beyond them all, for before his time
every one
went his own way, even in wickedness. But Glooskap first of all threw
out his
soul unto others.
And when he came to Ogumkeok
he found a hut, and in it, seated over a fire, the ugliest old hag he
had ever
seen, trembling in every limb, as if near death, dirty, ragged, and
loathsome
in all ways. Looking up at him with bleared eyes, she begged him to
gather her
a little firewood, which he did. And then she prayed him to free her
from the wah
gook(M.), or vermin, with which she was covered, and which were
maddening
her with their bites. These were all devils in disguise, the spirits of
foul
poison, such as she deemed must kill even the Master. Now Glooskap,
foreseeing
all this, had taken with him, as he came, from a bog many cranberries.
And
bidding Pook-jin-skwess bend over, he began to take from her hair the
hideous
vermin, and each, as he took it, became a horrid porcupine or toad.22
Then the hag asked, "Have you found one?" "I have," replied
the Master. "Basp!" (M.) "Crush it!" was her answer,
and Glooskap crushed a cranberry; and she, hearing the noise, thought
that he
had done as she bid, and that the poison on his fingers would penetrate
to his
life. But he put the imps, one by one, under the wooden platter, which
lay
before him. As this went on he put the witch to sleep. When she awoke
he was
gone. The foul porcupines and toads were swarming all over the ground,
having
upset their hive. And filled with fury at being made a jest of, since
it was a
great despite that he had not even found it worth while to kill her
when
asleep, she burst out into her own form, which was beautiful as sin,
wild as
the devil, and gathering up all her imps, and making herself far more
magical
by fiercer will, went onward to encounter him again.
Then Glooskap came to a
narrow pass in the hills. Here were two terrible beasts, as one story
has it,
or two monstrous dogs,23 as it is told in another. And they
attacked
him; but he set his own at them, and they, growing to tremendous size,
killed
the others. His dogs were so trained that when called to come off they
went on,
and the more they were bid to be quiet the more they bit.
Soon he came to the top of a
high hill, and looking thence over all the land saw afar off a large
wigwam,
and knew in his heart that an enemy dwelt therein. And coming to it he
found an
old man and his two daughters.24
Now the girls came out greeting25 him with very
pleasant
glances, wooing softly and sweetly; they offered him a string of
sausages, such
as the Indians make from the entrails of the bear by only turning them
inside
out. For the fat, which clings to the outside, fills the skin. When
these are washed
and dried and smoked, many deem them delicious. But these which the
girls
offered, as girls do, to show their love, by casting the string round
the neck
of the favored youth, were enchanted, and had they once put the
necklace upon
him he would have been overpowered. However, they knew not of this new
magic
which the Master had brought into the land, by which one can read the
heart;
so, as they sidled up unto him with smiles and blandishments, waving in
the
wind as they danced their garlands of enchanted sausages, he looked as
if he
wanted to be won. And when his dogs growled at them he cried, "Cuss!"
(M.), which means Stop! but which the dogs only knew as "Hie,
at
them!" So they flew at the witches, and these flashed up like fire into
their own dreadful forms of female fiends. Then there was a terrible
tumult,
for never before in the land of the Wabanaki had there been such a
battle. All
the earth and rocks around were torn up. All the while the Master cried
to the
dogs, "Stop! These are my sisters. Come off, ye evil beasts! Let them
alone! Cease, oh cease!" Yet the more he exhorted them to peace the
more
they inclined to war, and the more fiercely they fought, until the
witches
fled.
Then he entered the wigwam
where the old sorcerer sat, waiting for him as food. And the Master
said,
"Are you hungry? Or do you love sausages? Here they are!" Instantly
casting the links around his neck, he was taken, and Glooskap slew him
with one
blow.
Then, going on, he reached
the Strait of Camsoke26 (M.),
or Canso, and to cross over again sang the song which wins the whales,
and one
of these rising, carried him to the opposite shore. Thence he made the
circle
of Oona-mah-gik, keeping round by the southern coast, and coming to the
old
camps where his enemy had been. From the witch-kwed-lakun-cheech,
or
birch-bark dish, left by Martin, he learned how long they had been gone.27
When he came to Uk-tu-tun (M., Cape North) he found they had rowed to
Uk-tuk-amqw (M., Newfoundland), and had left three days before.
GLOOSKAP
SETTING HIS DOGS ON THE WITCHES
Then again he sang, and once
more a whale carried him over. And now he knew that he was indeed
coming to
what he sought, for in the deserted camp he found the embers of a fire,
still
smoking. Advancing rapidly, he saw near the next camp Martin, seeking
wood to
burn. The youth and the old Dame Bear had been most cruelly treated by
Win-pe,
and they were nearly starved, but Martin's clothes were good.28
And
Martin was so sunk in sorrow that he did not hear Glooskap call him,
and not
till the Master threw a small stick at him did he look up, and even
then he
thought it had fallen from a tree. Then, seeing him, he cried out with
joy; but
Glooskap, who was hiding in the woods, bade him be silent. "Wait till
it
is dark," he said, "and I will go to your wigwam. Now you may go home
and tell your grandmother."
In the other story (M.) it
is narrated that as Martin with the grandmother were on the road, and
Dame Bear
bore him as almost a babe on her back, he turned his head and saw
Glooskap
following them, and cried out, —
"Where, oh where,
Where
is my brother?
He
who fed me often
On
the marrow of the moose!"
And she replied, —
"Alas for thee,
boy!
He
is far, far away;
You
will see him no more."
But the little fellow,
seeing him again, sang as before, and Dame Bear, turning her head and
beholding
her Master, was so moved that she fainted and fell to the ground. Then
Glooskap
raised her in his arms, and when she had recovered she related how
cruelly they
had been treated by Win-pe. And Glooskap said, "Bear with him yet a
little
while, for I will soon pay him in full for what he has done."
Then the Master bade the old
woman go back to the camp with Martin, and say nothing. It was the
youth's duty
to go for water and tend the baby in its swinging cot. And Glooskap
told him
all that he should do. When he should bring water he must mix with it
the worst
filth, and so offer it to Win-pe, the sorcerer.
And even as he ordered it
was done, and Martin meekly offered the foul drink to the evil man, who
at the
smell of it cried aloud, "Uk say!" (M., Oh, horror!) and bade
him bring a cleaner cup. But Martin, bearing the babe, threw it into
the fire,
and, running to the spot where Glooskap hid, cried out, "Nse-sako!
nse-sako!" (M., My brother! my brother!) Win-pe, pursuing him,
said,
"Cry out to him; your brother cannot help you now. He is far away from
here, on the island where I left him. Cry out well, for now you must
die!"
All this had been done that Win-pe's power might be put to sleep by
anger, and
his mind drawn to other things. And the Master rose before him in all
his
might, and stepped forward, while Win-pe drew backward a pace to
recover his
strength. And with great will the Master roused all the magic within
him, and,
as it came, he rose till his head was above the tallest pine; and truly
in
those days trees were giants beyond those of this time. But the lord of
men and
beasts laughed as he grew till his head was far above the clouds and
reached
the stars, and ever higher, till Win-pe was as a child at his feet. And
holding
the man in scorn, and disdaining to use a nobler weapon, he tapped the
sorcerer
lightly with the end of his bow, like a small dog, and he fell dead.
______________________________
18. It is not impossible that
this
well-known Indian witch gave her name to Moll Pitcher, the famous
fortune-teller of Lynn.
19. A leap of about nine miles.
20. The Penobscots give the long
shoes to
Glooskap.
21. In the Tales and
Traditions of
the Eskimo, we are told that a woman named Arnakuak, being apparently
gifted by
magic with the ability to change her sex, had her daughter-in-law;
Ukuamak, for
a wife, and, having eloped with her, was followed and killed by her own
son. As
this is almost immediately followed by a story of a man who gave birth
to a
child, it would appear that the idea was common to both Eskimo and
Indians.
Only the wicked magicians in Indian tales change their sex, like Loki
in the
Edda.
22. In the Eskimo mythology, Arnarkuagsak,
the old woman of the sea, is tormented by vermin about her head. These
are
really the souls of still-born or murdered infants, who have become
imps. The
first thing which the angakok or sorcerer, who visits her must
do is to
free her from these pests. The descent of the sorcerer to this mother
of all
the monsters of the sea, who are at the same time giants, when
they
choose to assume the human form, recalls that of Odin to Hela. Both
make this
journey to hell, not for themselves, but in the interests of mankind.
23. The Indians had dogs before
the coming
of the whites. They were wolf-like.
24. In another account, an old
sorceress
and her daughters; also an old man and his wife and daughters.
According to two
versions, these are all separate wizards, but the whole spirit of the
Passamaquoddy legends make them Pook-jin-skwess alone.
25. In the story of the Rabbit
and Lusifee
the sorcerer singly twice assumes the form of an old man and his two
daughters.
There is yet another story, in which a magician thus triples himself
with two
daughters. It is, I believe, Eskimo, but I cannot distinctly remember
as to
this.
26. Camsoke means, "There is a
high
bluff on the opposite side of the river." — S. T. Rand.
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