393 71 15MB
English Pages [168] Year 2000
On
tAe,
R AI L of
1
ELDER BROTHER Qiaos'*yap. Staples of t/i& JfLicmac
Jlbt&lcl
MICHAEL
B.
Jndians
by
RUNNINGWOLF
(MICMAC NATION) &>
PATRICIA CLARK SMITH
JUustsuLUons by
MICHAEL
B.
RUNNING WOLF
$17.95 (Can. $25.99)
S
/
0-89255-248-4
TORIES OF Glous’GAP, ment of
the embodi-
the Great Spirit, are told by the
many Algonquin-speaking
tribes of the
United States and Canada.
Among them
is
the
Micmac of Maine, Quebec, and
the
Maritime Provinces. Since the seventeenth century, anthropologists have listened to
Micmac Now,
storytellers
and recorded their
for the first time,
tales firsthand.
we
tales.
are given these
Powerful and joy-filled, they
are irresistibly told
by two Micmac authors. LIBRARY
Beginning with
his arrival at the
time of Square
we
creation,
known
follow Glous’gap, also
Elder Brother, over the course of sixteen
He
helps shape the earth and populate
and he
creatures,
with
battles the monsters
who
— among them,
hoarding monster,
a giant bird
off with
tales.
it
threaten his people
flies
as
women and
shape-shifting sorceress
water-
a
of prey
who
children, and a
who
is
Glous’gap’s
eternal nemesis. In the last story, the world
has
become
a settled place
taught his people within
it.
how
and Glous’gap has
to live
harmoniously
Before he bids farewell, Glous’gap
foresees the future, including the
ominous
coming of the white man, and he promises return. “Is the time yet
upon us
Glous’gap will come back to walk
No
one
taught
is
us.
certain.
Always,
We
we
can only
.
.
.
to
when
among
us?
live as
he
wait for his return.” (continued on back flap)
PUBLIC
Copley
BOSTON
Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2017 with funding from
Kahle/Austin Foundation
https://archive.org/details/ontrailofelderbrOOmich
On
the
T RAI L
ef
ELDER BROTHER Qlou&'yafi StoJUes of
the,
JPUc/nac Jncllans
JZetold by
MICHAEL
B.
RUNNINGWOLF
(MICMAC NATION) &)
PATRICIA CLARK SMITH JUu&tbations. by
MICHAEL A
B.
RUNNINGWOLF
KAREN AND MICHAEL BRAZILLER BOOK
PERSEA BOOKS/NEW YORK
Copyright
© 2000 by Michael B. and
Illustrations
Patricia
RunningWolf
Clark Smith
© 2000 by Michael B. RunningWolf No
All rights reserved.
part of this publication
may
reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage
and
retrieval system,
without prior permission in writing
from the publisher.
Requests for permission to reprint or to make copies, and for any other information, should be addressed to the publisher: Persea Books, Inc.
171 Madison Avenue
New York, NY
10016
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
RunningWolf, Michael B.
On Micmac
the
trail
of elder brother: Glous’gap stories of the
Indians/retold by Michael B.
RunningWolf and
Patricia
Clark Smith; illustrations by Michael B. RunningWolf. p.
cm.
ISBN 0-89255-248-4 1.
(he; alk. paper)
Gluskap (Legendary' character) 3. I.
Micmac
2.
Indians.
Micmac mythology.
Smith, Patricia Clark.
II.
Title
E98.M6 R86 2000 398.2’089’973
—dc21
Designed by Leah Lococo. Typeset
99-087597
in
Adobe
Caslon.
Printed in the United States of America. First Edition
MICHAEL DEDICATES THIS BOOK TO HIS SON JOSEPH ISAAC RUNNINGWOLF, AND TO HIS NIECES BETH AND SHILOH AND HIS NEPHEW LAWRENCE. PAT DEDICATES THIS BOOK
TO HER SONS JOSH AND CALEB, HER NIECE
SHAULA, HER NEPHEW MAX, AND HER
GRAND-GODSON JACKSON. TO THE CHILDREN OF THE MICMAC NATION,
AND ALL FUTURE GENERATIONS OF
MICMAC PEOPLE
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
T
HANKS, ABOVE ALL,
to the ancestors
who
shared
their stories.
Thanks Crawford,
to our spouses,
who
and gave sage
Thanks Karen
Kat RunningWolf and John
put up with our madness, listened patiently,
advice.
Susan Cohen and our editor
to our agent
Braziller for seeing this
book
into print.
We
could
not wish for better colleagues.
Thanks
to the
these stories, and Rita, Jim,
many
people
who
read or listened to
who commented and made
suggestions:
Mike, and Denise Clark; James Colbert;
Tom
Cummings; Gary and Marlys Harrison; David Johnson; Tony Mares and Carolyn Meyer; K.T. Martin;
Elsie
and
Edythe Mocho; Louis Owens; Rich, Janet, Danny, and Chrissy Pascal; Luci Tapahonso; Sophie Wadsworth; Sharon Oard Warner; Jill Williams and Mike Wolfe;
Hugh
and Barbara Witemeyer.
A special thanks Pat’s students in
to Victor
all,
we
to
Native American Literature classes at the
University of New Mexico.
To
and Martha Garcia, and
say welalin
.
CONTENTS ix
Introduction
The Coining
of
Glousgap
3
Glous'gap and Young Wolf
Why
the Beav ers
Are
at
War
II
with Glous’gap
Porcupine and Fisher
H ow
21
Glous gap Saved Pine Marten
and Mrs. Bear
25
Glous gap and Grandfather Turtle
43
Glous’gap and the Water Monster
57
H ow
the Sacred Pipe to the
W as Brought
Micmac
65
Glous’gap and Painted Turtle
The Boy
in the Birchharh
Glous’gap and Wotjou’san, the
Glous’gap and the Little
73
Box
W ind Bird
Summer Woman
Glous’gap and the Gulls
107
Glous’gap and Wa’sis
117
Glous’gap and the Three Washes Glous’gap’s Farewell
1
Map: Land of the Micmac Micmac
Glossary
Further Reading and Viewing the Authors
144
121
27
13 2
and Pronunciation Guide
About
8l
141
133
INTRODUCTION
T
HE STORIES Micmac
IN THIS
BOOK
people of the Maritime Provinces, Quebec,
and Maine. The Micmac belong
peoples
among known
as the
made up of
Wabanaki,
Micmac,
the
even more widely
people
as far
south
as
Children
also called the
The Wabanaki
Malicite, Passamaquoddy,
Penobscot, and Abenaki tribes and bands. ries are told
stories are
the closely connected Eastern Algonquin
of the Dawn, and Keepers of the Sunrise. are
body of
to the great
Algonquin language speakers, and many of these shared
by the
are told
Some of the
among Algonquin
Delaware and
as far
speakers;
west
as the
Great Lakes know of water-hoarding monsters and
some
sto-
fear-
lake serpents.
We Micmac were
among
the
first
American Indians
to
have contact and interaction with Europeans coming to these shores, and yet their descendents to this day tle
about
us.
that center
Here we
tribe.
all
sampling of the
on Glous’gap, the great being
Elder Brother.
among
offer a
Though most of
know lit-
many
stories
whom we
call
these stories are told
the Wabanaki, they differ slightly from tribe to
We generally tell the Micmac version.
God
is
called Gitji
Manitou
Nigsgam (Holy Grandfather) and Glous’gap
who moves
is
the
live
or Kesoulk (The Creator),
embodiment of
about on the earth and
with people and animals.
cannot
(the Great Spirit) or
Our
who
his power. It
without the people, nor can we
*
ix
he
has direct dealings
stories tell us that
INTRODUCTION
is
Glous’gap
live
without
—
him.
He
our spiritual teacher, the ultimate warrior, medi-
is
cine-person, and occasional trickster. it;
others think he
Some
human. In any
is
say he
a spir-
is
case, the things
Glous’gap says and does are models for the way our people
approach
life.
The Glous’gap wisdom of
the
like these are
stories
Wabanaki of
embody
the laws, morals, and
Some may
people.
think stories
use today, but they are wrong.
little
Ingenuity, audacity, a sense of humor, cooperation, kindness, the hatred
of injustice, the determination to survive
these things always matter. Moreover, the earth place
is
where astonishing things can happen, much
did in Glous’gap’s time
among
us.
These
still
as
a
they
stories unfold in a
wonderful world of monsters and magic that
is
still
very
recognizably the northeastern woodlands, a world brim-
ming over with drawn
to
intelligent
come and
whale-summoning
serve
title
Here, whales are
irresistibly
whoever can sing the Micmac
song, spring flowers speak to us of
hope, and porcupines are
As our
life.
irascible,
On
suggests,
new
then as now.
the Trail of Elder Brother fol-
lows Glous’gap through his adventures during the time he lived
with our people.
When
he comes, the earth
and barely formed, and he helps with creatures and plants. to live
and how
He
to shape
to live together,
behalf with the monsters
who
and populate
human
teaches
raw
is still
beings
it
how
and he battles on our
threaten on
all sides.
By
the
time he takes his leave of us, the world has become a more settled place,
that arises
These
and the
later stories
from human traditional
x
evil
hearts.
Micmac *
mostly concern the
stories
do not have
INTRODUCTION
distinct
beginnings, middles, and ends that leave the characters tidily
accounted
for.
As
in all great story cycles,
Norse or Hindu, Greek or Iroquoian, each branch growing out of
many more Glous’gap story than
we
a
wide-spreading
stories,
retell here.
one
tale is
tree.
There
are
and many more parts to each
But you can sometimes
the story-branches in this
whether
book connect and
how
see
intertwine.
For example, certain decisions Glous’gap makes back in the
dawn of time come
infuriate
some of the animals, and
the clams, beavers, and
their anger out
moose
in years to
will continue to take
on him and the Micmac people. Again,
Glous’gap’s wars with the sorceress Poug’tjin’skwes span
many by
ages,
and each meeting of these old enemies
spiced
their past encounters.
Since the seventeenth century, a anthropologists have listened to set
is
down
their versions
Micmac
of Glous’gap
of these accounts in an appendix. As the only retold
number of non-Native
stories.
far as
book of traditional Micmac
storytellers
We
list
we know,
stories that
we know of
some
ours
is
have been
and written down by two Micmac authors.
the only account
and
It is also
that focuses entirely on
Glous’gap’s history.
How At times
this
in
book came
our young
to be written
lives
is
a story in
we were being
raised within a
few miles of one another, but we did not meet were middle-aged and
living in
New
itself.
Mexico,
far
until
we
from the
beaches and woodlands of our childhoods. Michael
RunningWolf grew up is
a native speaker
the very
Micmac
in
Maine and New Brunswick. He
of Micmac, a storyteller descended from people
who were
INTRODUCTION
*
often interviewed by
xi
early anthropologists.
Michael learned most of these
as a child after the
chores were done on Friday and
Saturday nights,
when he and
gathered around the his
wood
his seven brothers
and
tales
sisters
stove to listen to his father or
grandmother or some other family member begin
story.
In the old way, his grandmother would sometimes
of birchbark to
bite shapes out
Smith
Patricia Clark Irish,
a
also
grew up
French Canadian, and
of the
illustrate a part
Maine, and she
in
Micmac
story.
descent. Pat
fessor of English at the University of
New
is
of
is
a pro-
Mexico, where
she teaches Native American literature and creative writing. Together,
ple to
life
We
we have
tried to bring the stories
of our peo-
on the printed page.
wanted
to give our readers the
things as often as possible; there
is
Micmac words
a glossary
ciation guide at the back of the book.
north country on page 132 uses
and pronun-
The map of
Micmac
for
the
place-names.
It
traces Glous’gap’s trail as he journeys to rescue Pine
Marten and Mrs. Bear and marks other
sites in
New
England, the Maritime Provinces, and points beyond
where the Glous’gap
happen.
were made by Michael,
illustrations
his
stories
The map and
who
the
incorporates into
pen-and-ink drawings traditional designs and symbols
from Micmac
quill
and bead work, hide paintings, and
writings on rock and birchbark.
now
Listen
the old-time
Glousgapi
.
.
.
to the voice of the storyteller, beginning in
way with here
is
these words: Wodiriit atogagan
a story
of Glous’gap!
MICHAEL RUNNINGWOLF PATRICIA CLARK SMITH
xii *
INTRODUCTION
On
tho
T RAI L
of
ELDER BROTHER
&
THE COMING OF GLOUS GAP Wodiriit atogagan Clous'gapi
£JOME
.
SAY THAT GLOUS’GAP was born
speak of him coming
in
more ancient
sto-
down from Was’ouk,
the
the land of the Wabanaki, but ries
.
Sky World, during the time the world was being
formed by Kesoulk, the Creator. They say Glous’gap made his
way
that
across the Sunrise
was
really a
and
spruce, pine,
Ocean
canoe
in a great stone
whole island of granite forested with
With him on
cedar.
the island lived
some
people with the names and natures of different birds and
animals ple ple.
—Mrs. Bear and Pine Marten,
and the Bluejay
The
folk,
the Partridge peo-
Clam peo-
Painted Turtle, and the
island-canoe finally anchored off the northeast
coast, the place the
Wabanaki
There were no people
living
the
call
on the mainland
was rumored there were wild people
how
west. Just
long ago
Land of the
yet,
but
it
living very far to the
these things
all
Sunrise.
happened
is
lost to
us now.
Soon
after
Glous’gap came to these shores, he built
a
lodge for himself. Right away Kesoulk the Creator gave
him work out
all
“Take your maplewood
to do.
the rivers and streams of their
bow and
mud and
dredge
sludge,”
Kesoulk ordered. “Make the channels deep and clean so the waters can run smoothly into the ocean.” So Glous’gap
began clearing
all
making
the waterways of the continent,
deep riverbeds that wound their way toward the great
He mud
ocean to the
east.
did this by dragging his
bow through
the
and
By
the end of the
exhausted.
He
silt,
first
and
it
maplewood
was hard, hot work.
day Glous’gap was
trudged along the
salt
trail
back to
muddy and his
wigwam
and sank down on the cool grass before the door of the lodge. After a while he got his second
wind and began
looking around him, and suddenly he saw something he hadn’t noticed before. just traveled
4
was
*
Coming
a lovely
trail
he had
young woman, slim and
strong.
along the very
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
How
had he ever missed seeing
walked straight over
down
smiled
“What “I
am
sitting
and
you doing here?” asked Glous’gap.
woman
have come to help you,” replied the
voice. “I this
where Glous’gap was
to
him.
at
are
he wondered? She
her,
resourceful and young, and
in a clear
will be
I
good
at
work.”
Glous’gap had to admit he could use the help, and so he invited her to stay with him in his lodge.
The
follow-
ing morning, after the sun had risen from the ocean,
Glous’gap and the young
woman went
ways and worked very hard
They
day
at cleaning the rivers.
pulled up debris from the beds and dredged
from the channels so land,
all
out to the water-
mighty
rivers
way smoothly
The two and were
and
the waters of
the rivers of the
all
little rivers alike,
could
make
their
to the sea.
returned to Glous’gap’s
sitting
when they
all
silt
wigwam
that evening
exhausted on the grass before the door
spied a handsome, well-muscled
walking toward them along the
trail
young man
they had just taken
home. This time Glous’gap was not so
surprised.
He
sus-
pected this newcomer was part of Kesoulk’s plan for his
new- forming world. “Come over the
young man. “What “I’ve
come
young and
are
you doing here?”
to help you,” the
resourceful,
and
here!” Glous’gap cried to
I’ll
young man
be good
replied. “I
at this
“Where have you come from?” Glous’gap “I
am
work.” asked.
have come from Was’ouk, the Sky World,” the
young man invited the
said,
and Glous’gap nodded
young man
to stay in his
to himself.
wigwam
THE COMING OF GLOUS’GAP
as well.
* 5
He
The
next day
three
all
dredging out the riverbeds.
hands
at
work, by
late
completed. Glous’gap tifully all
the rivers
raised his eyes
went
forth together to finish
What with
three pairs of strong
afternoon the great task was at
felt satisfied
now
when he saw how beau-
flowed to meet the ocean.
from the waters, and he frowned
a
could see there was more work to be done to
world the sort of place Kesoulk meant Glous’gap turned to the young
Then he little.
He
make
the
to be.
it
woman
know, we have plenty of plants and
and
“You
said,
and bushes here,
trees
but they have no buds, no blossoms, no leaves, and no I
want you
go around
to
to each
last
fruit.
growing thing and help
it.
Give the evergreens fragrant needles, and give them cones as well so
they can
make more
cedars and spruces and pines.
Give the oaks acorns, and wrap shining white bark around Let there be strawberries
the birches.
ings, blackberries in the thickets,
the bogs.
Be
sunny
autumn, so we can enjoy
maples and golden beeches and bronze oaks.”
when
hard, and
were done she proudly showed the splendid and shrubs
to Glous’gap.
He
would be
ful trees to
good idea
a
some
young woman to bring
my
said,
birds
all,
and but
“You know,
on these beauti-
said. “I’d
them
•
Sky World,” the
birds back there in the
here.
be very glad I
really
if
we
could find some
miss them!”
So Glous’gap summoned up 6
trees
sing for us.”
“I left all
way
to have
her tasks
admired them
then he rubbed his chin thoughtfully and it
in
sure to give each leafy tree the sort of foliage
The young woman worked
plants
clear-
and cranberries bobbing
that will turn just the right color in scarlet
in the
all
his
power and
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
called
upon Kesoulk
Down
World.
send the birds from their
to
home
in the
they came, the whole host of birds, wheeling
and gliding and flapping and diving through the of all
and colors with
sizes
light.
When
their
wings gleaming
Land of
they reached the
posed to do. The chickadee its
own name. The
the lakes and laughed.
The
air,
birds
in the sun-
the Sunrise, each
bird immediately began to do the very things
called out
Sky
it
was sup-
branches and
flitted in the
loon rocked on the waters of
waded and
blue heron
fished in
the ponds, the red-winged blackbird teetered and trilled
from the
cattails,
the jay screamed, the robin caroled from a
bough, and the eagle soared grandly above
down
drifting
to
all, its
Glous’gap and his helpers
Glous’gap smiled to hear and see
how
cries
far below.
the birds enlivened
the world.
Next, Glous’gap turned to the young
“We
man and
said,
need some animals around here!”
Again, Glous’gap called
summoned up
upon the Creator
Creator
the greatest of
is
all
to help him. all
Now
beings, but his
times works through Glous’gap, and so
While
two helpers watched
his
his strength
it
Kesoulk the
power some-
was
this time.
in awe, Glous’gap created
the animals, and as he called each to him, he gave
name.
He made
gwetj, or Chatter.
“What
will
the squirrel and called
That
squirrel
you do
was
if I let
and
him
as big as a
it
a
A’dou’dou’-
whale!
you loose on the world?”
Glous’gap asked A’dou’dou’gwetj.
With
that the squirrel leaped over to a towering tree
and brought
it
down with
a crash.
“You’re too destructive to be so big!” Glous’gap scolded
THE COMING OF GLOUS’GAP
*
7
as
he reshaped A’dou’dou’gwetj into the
little
fellow he
remains today.
Then Glous’gap him
created the
beaver and
first
named
Kwa’bit, or Hard-tooth. Kwa’bit too was as big as a
“What
whale.
will
you do
if I let
you loose
in the world?”
Glous’gap asked the beaver. Right away Kwa’bit set ously to work. a
dam
He gnawed
and
great trees to splinters
furi-
built
so vast the countryside started to flood from horizon
to horizon.
“This won’t work,” muttered Glous’gap, dismantling the dam. “You’ll
hard to create
drown the world we have been working
if I let
you go on being
this size.”
so
Then he
tapped Kwa’bit lightly on the back, and the animal shrank to the size
of ordinary beavers today.
Next, Glous’gap tried his hand at creating the moose.
He named him Off Trees, and
Te’am’mous’e, meaning
called
him Te’am
He
for short.
that if you were to stand at his feet
Strips
Te’am was so big
and look up, you could
not see his head. Glous’gap thought to himself, that a
game animal of this
mountains
flatten the forests, the
beautiful world. It just
isn’t
worth
So Glous’gap tapped the moose to
make him
shrink, but
smaller. Eventually,
moose and
scratch, but that
At
last,
to
lightly
*
true
make him
path
in this
so big.”
on the hindquarters
Te’am refused
to
become any
kill
that giant
moose-making over again from
a story for another time.
Glous’gap finished creating
his satisfaction,
8
is
it
in his
—everything
Glous’gap was forced to
start his
“It’s
could feed plenty of hungry
going to trample everything
families, but he’s
and
size
Things
all
the animals to
and he looked around happily. Everywhere,
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
creatures were burrowing and nibbling, scurrying and
skulking, napping and scratching.
dank
blindly in the
earth, the otter
mudslide and splashed into the at dusk,
river,
The mole tunneled tobogganed down
the bat flittered about
and the doe stepped quietly through the brush
lowed by her two dappled fawns. All was
Now to
them,
his
as
it
fol-
should be.
Glous’gap turned to his two helpers, and he said
“My
friends,
The young
another.”
and Glous’gap could will live together,”
and your children
I
am going
marry you
to
to
one
people looked at each other shyly,
tell this
plan pleased
he went on, “and you
them
will
You
both. “You
have children,
will dwell all
your
days in this beautiful world you have helped to make.
You
can drink
The
nuts.
You
its
will have children.
clear water
and eat
its
greens and fruits and
animals and birds will be your companions here.
will enjoy their grace
and
their courage,
and some-
times they will give up their lives to help feed you and your family.
Go now
begin your
and make
a
wigwam
and
lives together.”
So the two bade farewell away hand
for yourselves,
in
to
Glous’gap and walked
hand, looking for a place to build their lodge.
Glous’gap watched them go, smiling.
By
this story,
our people
know how our
came down from the Sky World
when
grandparents
to help Glous’gap,
the world was new.
THE COMING OF GLOUS’GAP
#
9
back
GLOUS’GAP AND YOUNG WOLF Wodiriit atogagan Glous'gapi
T
HE ABENAKI PEOPLE
.
.
.
say that Glous’gap
formed himself from dust shaken from the
Creator’s hands.
But our Micmac
stories tell us that
Glous’gap was actually a twin with a younger brother.
Just as
much
Glous’gap was good, his brother
as
Utj’bak’tasum, or
Young Wolf, was thoroughly
evil.
Before they came into this world, the two babies held
womb. They
council with one another in their mother’s talked about the different ways they
Glous’gap
said, “I
wanted
choose to be born in the usual way, just
as other babies are.”
He knew
that
it
would be
lead the people, and being born in the
would help him
child
to be born.
his job to
way of an ordinary
be closer to them.
to
But Young Wolf thought himself too great a being
come
forth into the world in such a
vowed,
“When my
time
arrives,
I
common
manner.
shall burst out
to
He
through
our mother’s armpit!”
As
the brothers predicted, so
it
came
to pass. Glous’-
gap, first-born and eldest, slipped quietly and easily into this tle
world, and his mother smiled to see her beautiful
son.
But suddenly she was wracked with
terrible
lit-
pangs
quite unlike the normal pains of childbirth. Sure enough,
Young Wolf fought and clawed
bloody way out
his
through his mother’s armpit, and thus she died in this unnatural birth.
Now both
children were sacred, and both were protect-
ed against death.
The Creator had whispered
blow from
that only a
would be
fatal for
Glous’gap
a flowering rush could kill
Young Wolf he whispered root
to
that only a
blow from
him.
To
a fern-
him. Each child was told to guard
his secret carefully.
The two
who knew
boys grew up together.
their lives
*
day Young Wolf,
were both safeguarded, casually asked
Glous’gap just what 12
One
it
would take
to kill
him. But
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
how
Glous’gap, remembering
had
slain their
own
mother, thought
who seemed
one
life-secret to this
may
said to himself, “It
you what,
each of us shall
trust his
to relish death. Still,
he
me
to
So he
secret.”
my brother, let us
know
unwise to
it
prove important one day for
know Young Wolf’s own “I’ll tell
thoughtlessly Utj’bak’tasum
the
Young Wolf,
said to
exchange
secrets.
Then
most important thing about
his
beloved brother.” “All right.
You go
first,”
said
Young Wolf, and
the elder
brother agreed.
But Glous’gap was test
cautious,
and he was determined
Young Wolf. “The only way
I
can be killed
stroke of an owl’s feather,” he lied.
is
to
by the
Young Wolf, however,
told the truth, saying, “I can be killed only
by
a
blow from
a
fern-root.”
After
many
days
came
it
to pass that Kwa’bit’tjitj, the
son of Great Beaver, tempted Young gap.
Now the
beavers
still
Wolf
hated Glous’gap because of what
had happened back when Glous’gap was animals,
to kill Glous’-
first
creating the
when he had
forced the giant beaver to shrink to a
The
beavers couldn’t help brooding about
manageable
size.
what mighty dam builders they could have been Glous’gap hadn’t interfered.
and taking up
his
bow
“I’ll
do
it,”
said
elder brother with
it
Young Wolf,
he shot Ko’ko’kas the Owl.
with one of those big soft feathers, Young as
if
Armed
Wolf struck
his
Glous’gap slept peacefully in the
cool green shade of a beech tree. Glous’gap started awake in
anger and Young
after
Wolf ran
away. But Glous’gap hollered
him, “Ho, Younger Brother!
It is
not an owl’s feather
but a pine root that shall be the death of me!”
glous’gap and young wolf
•
13
Some
days passed, and peace of a sort seemed to be
restored between the brothers. “Let us be friends and go
hunting together
we used
as
to,”
They walked
Glous’gap, and Glous’gap agreed.
woods and made
into the clear,
their
Young Wolf
camp
a long
way
beside a pool in a
slow-running stream, a place where game animals
would
come
surely
camp, Glous’gap
to drink in the evening. After setting
felt
Young Wolf came sneaking up on elder brother, a pine root.
and
Once more,
the sleeping form of his
Glous’gap came awake with a roar and drove into the woods.
Then Glous’gap
in
a nap.
time he smote him on the head with
this
Young Wolf off deep
head in
up
drowsy from the sun and the walking,
and he stretched himself out to take
was
said to
his hands.
no way
sat
He
down
felt
beside the stream with his
so sad to
know
to be trusted. Glous’gap
that his brother
began picking up
smooth stones from the bank and tossing them
idly into
the water as he thought about his brother and their poor
Now
mother, long dead. in order to save his
own
he had life.
lied to
“Of
Young Wolf
course, the truth
nothing but a blow from a flowering rush can me,” he mused aloud to himself
as
twice
is
that
really kill
he tossed another stone
into the pool.
Unbeknownst tossing stones nearby, and he
Young Beaver was poking about had
splashing sounds. to tell
him what
Wolf was
to Glous’gap, all the while
swum
He
in the reeds
immediately sought out Young
he’d overheard Glous’gap saying.
ever present he asked
*
sat there
over to see what was making the
so pleased he offered to give
14
he
lor.
The
little
Wolf
Young
Young Beaver what-
creature squeezed his
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
eyes shut and cried, “Oh, please, Master
should so love to have wings
When Young Wolf heard
like a
duck or
this foolish wish,
Young Beaver
scornfully and told
to
Young Wolf,
he
go back
I
a
goose!”
just
laughed
to his
pond.
Young Beaver grew very angry Young Wolf’s contemptuous treatment of him, and straightaway he went to Glous’gap’s
how
confessed what he’d overheard and
he’d carried the secret of Glous’gap’s
Wolf said.
camp and
life
to
Young
Glous’gap listened carefully to what the small beaver
He nodded
his head,
and then he stood up
in sorrow.
Plucking one of the ferns that grew abundantly in the
damp ground by
the
est searching for
Young Wolf.
evil
woodland
pool, he set off into the for-
When
Glous’gap found his
younger brother, he smote him so hard with the fern-
root that
Young Wolf
instantly
fell
down
dead. Glous’gap
sang the death song over the body of his younger brother
and wept
bitterly.
The Micmac entombed Peninsula.
in the
He
say the
lies
Chic-chouc Mountains, out on the Gaspe
will rise
when Glous’gap
body of Young Wolf
up
will battle
at the last all
days of this earth,
over again the giants and
monsters he fought in the olden times, and Young Wolf will lead that terrible army.
time
is
with a
coming, for then Glous’gap terrible noise.
for the brother he
world might be
know when
People will will
shake the ground
But meanwhile Glous’gap
was forced to slaughter
a safe place for beasts
that
still
weeps
in order that the
and human beings.
glous’gap and young wolf
*
15
.
WHY THE BEAVERS ARE AT WAR WITH GLOUS’GAP Wodinir atogagan Glous'gapi
B
ACK AT THE DAWN gap created
beaver he Kwa’bit,
all
made was
of things
.
.
when
Glous’-
the creatures, the very as big as a
whale.
first
One day
whose name means Hard-tooth, began
to
home he dreamed of for himself He wiped
build the
whole
wood
of forest just for the
tract
and the dam he constructed was so flood
tall
to
make
out a
his lodge,
the waters began to
the country roundabouts. Needless to say, this
all
greatly displeased Glous’gap, who’d
worked
so hard to
dredge out the broad watercourses and make our land beautiful.
“Stop,
my
friend!” called out Glous’gap the Gitji’ke’-
man
napi, the great
of power. “You’ll drown everything
we’ve got here!
Great Beaver, tried to say,
“Go
Gitji’ Kwa’bit,
was too busy to
He
listen.
away, Glous’gap,” but just then he was
swimming
off with another stand of huge trees in his
mouth, and
it
came out more
“Come back
like
‘“O away, ’ous’ap!”
and Great
here!” thundered Glous’gap,
Beaver dropped his mouthful of timber and stared defiantly at
him. “I’m building myself a lodge and a
needs, and that’s
Glous’gap said only one
many
who
others
“No one “I
am
there
all
to say about that!”
is
sternly,
dam
to suit
my
he snarled.
“Friend Kwa’bit, you are not the
has need of a place to suit himself1 There are .
whose needs you must is
as
important
as
I
consider!”
am!” Great Beaver replied.
reshaping the world!”
Glous’gap shook his head.
“My
friend, you’re too
destructive for your size!” he warned, but Gitji’ Kwa’bit
paid no attention.
He
simply eased himself into the water
so only his nose, his back, ble.
trees
He
and
his
broad
flat tail
were
visi-
occupied himself by ferrying stand after stand of
from the shore 18
*
to his towering
dam.
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
“I
am
talking to you!” Glous’gap shouted over the
water, but Great Beaver paid no attention.
“‘O away, ’ous’ap!” he
mumbled
and to add emphasis to
der,
cross-hatched
tail
down on
his
again over his shoul-
words he slapped
the water, causing a drenching
deluge that sent Glous’gap sailing through the
dropped him
to earth
huge
his
some
air
and
distance away.
Glous’gap spluttered and stood up, soaked to the bone.
He
enormous rock and chucked
seized an
dodged
Beaver. Gitji’ Kwa’bit
and then another came
easily,
it
but
it
Great
at
when another
flying at him, Beaver
began to run.
In trying to escape Glous’gap’s barrage of boulders, Beaver
ran crashing through his pieces.
The
What
own dam,
a fearful sight!
splintering
dam
swamps, bogs, ponds, and lakes that of the Wabanaki peoples even to all
many
into
Water gushed everywhere.
flood from that broken
With
it
created the
are
found
many
in the land
this day.
his wild scramble to escape, Gitji’ Kwa’bit
didn’t get very
far.When he caught up with Beaver, the
dripping Glous’gap howled with laughter as he slapped
him on
To
the back, causing
him
to shrink to his present size.
this day, all beavers feel bitter
Glous’gap when they consider
might have stripped and what
dammed-up
But Glous’gap and
fur has kept
how many a
forests they
wonderful world of
waters they might have made. For that reason,
they always choose to
beaver,
and vengeful toward
in
make war upon him.
in his turn has
time he slew
been no friend of the
many of them, and
their sleek
him very warm.
WHY THE BEAVERS ARE AT WAR WITH GLOUS’CAP
•
19
.
*
PORCUPINE AND FISHER Wodiriit atogagan Glousgapi
L
ONG AGO, side.
The
.
.
a great flood covered the country-
waters washed away nests and bur-
rows and dens and camps and
villages,
and
all
the
creatures were left homeless. Porcupine and Fisher
r
and Glous’gap, our Elder Brother, the Lord of Creation,
down
sought refuge on a big uprooted tree floating swollen
all
the
river.
Matta’es the Porcupine did not recognize Glous’gap,
and even
if
he had,
it
wouldn’t have
Porcupine just wanted to be
made any
warm and
dry.
difference.
He dug
his
claws into the broadest, flattest part of the tree trunk, then raised his quills
carious perch, flood.
and forced Glous’gap
among
to take the
most pre-
the thin branches straggling in the
Every time the current buffeted the
got dunked in the icy waters.
He
spluttered
tree
Glous’gap
and shivered
as
he clung to the sodden branches.
Pe’gumk the Fisher recognized Glous’gap and wanted
to help him.
He
right
away
turned to the bristling Porcu-
pine and said, “Please, friend, give up your seat to this fellow. Can’t you see he’s soaked and chattering with the cold?” “I don’t care!” said
him swim
Porcupine. “If he doesn’t like
it,
let
off and find a tree of his own!”
“Please, friend!” said Fisher gravely, glancing over at
the drenched Glous’gap. “Don’t talk that way! Can’t you see
how much
this
“Better
one
is
suffering?”
him than me!” Porcupine
sneered, as the tree
careened through even wilder waters. Fisher tried once again. the roar of the flood, “It ishly!
I’ve
who
warm is
Friend!” he shouted above
sad that you are acting so self-
now
unhappy
creature
perch. Please, won’t you give
up your
asked you twice
take your safe
spot to he
is
“O
to let this
more worthy of it?”
But once again Porcupine
refused. “I
am
the great and
mighty Matta’es!” he taunted. “Nothing can move 22
*
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
me from
my of
chosen place!
my
will
tail
anyone
If
tries to
dislodge me, one slap
be enough to send him howling!”
he turned his back to Fisher and raised his
that,
With
quills in
fighting form.
Fisher had had enough, and he pounced upon Porcupine. Slashing claws and flashing teeth mixed with
and
flying fur
quills, so that
current as they fought.
Fisher at
last
the tree hobbled crazily in the
Amid
snarls, screams,
drove Porcupine off the safe wide trunk
toward the roots half- sub merged in the this time, Fisher
shot
full
and yeowls,
But with
quills.
By
frigid waters.
could not speak because his
of porcupine
down
a gallant
mouth was wave of his
paw, he offered the dry spot to Glous’gap.
Glous’gap saw poor Fisher’s injured mouth, and he
knew how much
it
drew Fisher near
trunk,
As
the quills.
He
hurt.
sat right
to him,
and
down on
the broad
carefully pulled out
the tree rushed ahead on the crest of the
great flood, Glous’gap told Fisher,
“From now on,
Pe’gumk, you will be Porcupine’s greatest enemy, and quills will
pay for
never again
his arrogance
And creature
so
it is,
who
unharmed.
harm
and
you. In this
way Matta’es
even to this day. Fisher a
When Micmac bits
his will
disrespect.”
can fight
droppings with
know
all
is
still
the only
porcupine and come away people come across animal
of porcupine
quill stuck in
Fisher has passed that way, and they
them, they
know
that once
again he has gotten the better of Porcupine, just as Glous’-
gap promised long ago.
PORCUPINE AND FISHER
*
23
HOW GLOUS’GAP SAVED
PINE
MARTEN AND MRS. BEAR Wodiriit atogagan Glous'gapi
1
N
THE OLD DAYS,
I island
.
.
.
.
Glous’gap lived on an
where he shared
a
lodge with Pine
Marten, the fellow he liked to
call
Younger Brother, and
Mrs. Bear, the elder he called Grandmother. Mrs. Bear kept the lodge neat and prepared meals and took good care of Glous’gap
and Pine Marten.
In those days, a person could be both an animal and a
human being
at the
Brother looked
like a
same time. Sometimes Younger
pine marten, with sleek
snout, and a long bushy
human
self into
young man.
tail.
But he could
fur, a
also
pointed
change him-
shape and be a bright-eyed baby or a
lithe
was the same with Mrs. Bear. Sometimes
It
she looked like a shaggy, snuffly she-bear, and sometimes she seemed to be a stout old lodge.
shuffling around the
Even when Pine Martin and Mrs. Bear took on
human they
woman
shape, there was always something about the
moved and spoke
that recalled their animal natures.
Glous’gap and Pine Marten shared
many
adventures
Sometimes Glous’gap would lend Pine Marten
together. his
way
magic
belt,
deeds. Pine
and then he too could perform wonderful
Marten himself had
a special possession. It
was
a small, ordinary-looking birchbark dish, the kind our peo-
ple call witj’kwid lakuritjitj. Pine
from
it.
Marten
ate all his
meals
In time of trouble, he could leave the dish any-
where, and Glous’gap would be sure to find
it.
By studying
certain mysterious markings Pine
Marten would make on
the birchbark, Glous’gap could
exactly
going with his
Now
little
tell
how
things were
family.
many
other Indian peoples living on
the island with Glous’gap.
Each band took on the name
there were
and the personality of some particular animal or
bird. In
those times, the Partridge people had begun to acquire a
26
*
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
!
little
power
and
for themselves,
gaining some power just
in the
way of such
things,
made them want more. They were
very jealous of Glous’gap, the most powerful being of
So the Partridge people held
ming
They decided
as partridges do.
was off on one of
a council,
take
meeting and drum-
that while Glous’gap
his expeditions, they
Marten and Mrs. Bear and
would kidnap Pine
them
if
shows how
One
he were
little
crisp
they
knew of Glous’gap’s
people’s meeting, Glous’gap
a
would
die
alone on the island. This only
left
November day not long
weeks of hunting
The
far away.
Partridge people had great hope that Glous’gap
of sorrow
all.
powers!
after the Partridge
was headed home
in the forest.
Over
his
after six
back he had slung
hunting cord strung with the rabbits and ducks he had
brought down with full
load of cut-up
his
maplewood bow, and he
moose meat
watered
as
own
carcass.
His mouth
he thought about the delicious moose-meat
stew Mrs. Bear would soon per.
pack he had
as well in a
neatly fashioned from the moose’s
carried a
But when he came
set
about cooking for their sup-
to the lodge, Pine
Marten and Mrs.
“
Bear were nowhere to be seen. Nougourriitj Grandmother! Utfkin!
My Younger Brother!” Glous’gap called out, but no
reply came.
Glous’gap spotted the tracks of several people, including
down
to the
whom
should
those of Pine Martin and Mrs. Bear, leading water’s edge.
he see
among
quickly followed them, and
at the shore
but Win’pe, the most dreaded sorcerer
the Partridge people, setting off in his canoe.
him were Bear,
He
his
own
whom he
wife and child, and Pine
had forced
HOW glous’gap SAVED
to
With
Marten and Mrs.
accompany him.
PINE MARTEN AND MRS. BEAR
*
27
The canoe was
still
within hailing distance, and so
Glous’gap cupped his hands to his mouth and shouted,
“Grandmother! Send me back would need
my
dogs!”
were to rescue
their help if he
He knew
his family.
he
Now
Glous’gap’s dogs, like Glous’gap himself, could assume any
and right
size,
they were only the size of
Mrs. Bear snatched up
squirrels.
bowl
moment
at that
— and
set the
two dogs
a woltestakun
afloat in
the shore where Glous’gap fished
water and greeted his loyal pets.
and
face
it.
it
—
a
wooden
It drifted easily to
out of the cold
The dogs
salt
licked his hands
and quivered with excitement. They thought they
would be
setting off on a fresh adventure right
away
to res-
cue their friends, but they were wrong. Glous’gap just stood and watched as the canoe bearing his family slowly
dwindled to looked up
a speck in the distance.
at
The dogs whined and
Glous’gap, but he only sighed.
Win’pe’s canoe was no longer
visible,
At
last,
when
he turned back to the
lodge, the dogs following anxiously behind him.
Meantime, Win’pe was puzzled that Glous’gap did not try to stop him. is
already
any
case,
He
thought to himself, “Perhaps Glous’gap
weakened because of the he decided to move
his family
and
moog’waddy,
his prisoners,
at the
loss
of his dear ones.” In
as quickly as
he could.
Win’pe paddled on
northeastern tip of what
With
to Passa’-
we now
call
Maine, and from there he ordered the canoe on to Grand
Manan. After camping Kes’poog’wit, which today.
And
is
there for a while, he crossed over to
where Yarmouth, Nova Scotia
so he went, slowly traveling northward along
the coast through Oun’a’mag’ik, or
28
is
*
Cape Breton, and
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
at last
now
over to Uk’tuk’kam’kou,
maps. If you look
at the
map
called
of northeastern
and Canada on page 132, you can
2
Now
whether
some other
it
was
Newfoundland on
New England
trace the trail
of Win’pe.
.
to strengthen his
own power
reason, no one knows. But the fact
or for
that
is
Glous’gap remained on his island for seven whole months before he began to pursue his marauding enemy. In high
summer, when he and went down
felt
to the
right,
he took his dogs
beach and stood there looking out to
sea, far across the waters.
to sing his
was
the time
Then
in a strong voice he
whale-summoning song,
began
the song the whales
have no choice but to obey.
Soon
a small
whale breached
in the distance
and swam
gladly along the shore straight to Glous’gap. Glous’gap
placed one foot on the whale to test his weight, but the
creature was too small and sank under the burden. Glous’gap just thanked him and sent him on his way.
Then Glous’gap sang
his
whale song again, and
this
time there came swimming up to him the largest whale in all
the briny oceans, a mighty she-whale.
Her name was
Bootup’skwes. She ferried Glous’gap and his dogs well and easily over the
waves
to Kes’poog’wit.
But Bootup had
always been afraid of getting stranded in shallow water, and so she called
up
to her passenger, “Is land in sight yet?”
Glous’gap, not wanting to get his feet wet, called back, “No!’
And
so
Bootup went on,
HOW glous’gap SAVED
PINE
slicing cleanly
through the
MARTEN AND MRS. BEAR
*
2 l)
!!
-
,
gray waters, with Glous’gap balanced deftly on her back.
His hair whipped about him, and the determined
salt
spray stung his
face.
As Bootup swam
on the ocean
shells lying
make out
on, she could begin to floor
below
and soon the
her, “
water grew so shallow that she cried out, Mooriastabagari kwitje' an' nook?” which means, “Isn’t the land showing itself as plain as a
bowstring?”
But Glous’gap
way from
They
called out to her,
“We
are
still
a
long
shore.”
raced on until the water was so shallow that
Bootup could hear the song the clams were singing from where they
Clam
lay
hidden under the sand below
the
people hate Glous’gap, and this was the song they
were singing to her That one
,
Luckily,
:
toss
Drown him
him from your back
.
in salt waters black
Bootup did not understand the language of
clams, and so the song was lost on her. But she
Glous’gap could speak the languages of
and she
Clam
Now
her.
called
up
to
all
knew
that
the creatures,
“What song
are those
goes something
like this,”
him, asking,
people singing, master?”
“Oh,” replied Glous’gap,
and he sang to
“it
her:
Koussal koussal koussal koussal
Hurry hurry hurry hurry Ferry that one, ferry that
man
,
over the waters swift as you can
30
*
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
—
Bootup obediently plied her
swimming
faster
and
tail
with
all
her might,
— and sudddenly found
faster
herself
thoroughly beached, high and dry on the shore! She could not believe that Glous’gap would deceive her so badly, and she sang out her whale’s lament:
Ah,
my grandson,
Alas,
noutjitj,
you have been my
Now I can
death, ’
never leave the land
Never again will I swim
in the sea.
But Glous’gap just laughed and sang back
Have
no fear
to her,
my grandmother,
Have no fear, nougoumi Wait and see,
You shall swim
in the sea once more!
Then with one shove of
his
maplewood bow
against
her massive forehead, Glous’gap sent Bootup sliding off the beach back into deep water. There the relieved whale
splashed and dove, flashing her before she headed off she
asked Glous’gap shyly,
swam up “
K'tin
and flukes
for joy.
But
close to shore again
and
tail
tumakun ak
turn a
we ?”
meaning, “Do you have a pipe and tobacco?”
Glous’gap replied Friend.
me,
I
“A'io, yes,
You want tobacco? Well,
am
in
your debt
—
Bootup, I
swam
dear Water
have some, and as for
so take this!”
With
her a short pipe and some tobacco and great she-whale
my
lit
it
that he gave for her.
The
off in high spirits, and Glous’gap
smiled, watching the faint cloud of smoke trailing after her.
HOW glous’gap SAVED
PINE MARTEN AND MRS. BEAR
*
31
To
this day, if
whales pass
you look out to sea carefully
by,
you may well catch
in places
a glimpse
where
of Bootup’s
pipe smoke.
3
Now
.
Glous’gap pushed on to the place where Win’pe had
camped
at
O’gum’ke’ge’ok, only to find the
But he looked around
site
abandoned.
and sure enough, there on
carefully,
the ground he found Pine Marten’s birchbark dish.
picked
it
up and studied the
scratched into the bark.
He
and went on following the
secret
He
markings Marten had
slipped the dish into his pack
trail
of the
evil
Win’pe.
Along the way Glous’gap came upon an old man and
woman. They knew and Pine Marten,
all
about Win’pe capturing Mrs. Bear
was gossiping about the
for everyone
way
the sorcerer had foiled even the mighty Glous’gap.
The
old couple told Glous’gap that
had
left a
good seven months
him they had heard rumors
Win’pe and the others
earlier.
that
They
also
Win’pe had
left
warned behind
monsters to guard his route so that Glous’gap could not follow him.
Right away Glous’gap suspected that the source of
some of these monsters must be
Poug’tjin’skwes, that witch
whom our people have many names — Evil Pitcher Woman and Black Cat Woman are two of them. She was for
just the sort
upon
of wicked being Win’pe would be
for help. Poug’tjin’skwes
had the power
likely to call
to take
many
shapes and forms. She could appear as one man, or one
woman,
old or young. She could appear as a bevy of beauti-
32
*
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
ful
women,
a
crowd of tumbling, laughing children, or
whole army of monsters. Glous’gap would prepared for every
was
it
On
colder.
late
just have to be
and he was.
possibility,
Glous’gap continued to follow the
now
as a
trail
of Win’pe. By
August, and the nights were growing Glous’gap passed a
his way,
about with rushes and
cattails.
When
little
bog hedged
he looked closely
at
the bog, he could see the red of ripening cranberries.
“Aha!” said Glous’gap to himself, and he
bog and gathered
them
stored
might come
At lodge.
last
in
into the
good many of the cranberries and
a
He had
Pine Marten’s dish.
an idea they
in handy.
he came to O’gum’ke’ok, where he found
There by
woman
waded
a
a fire sat a filthy, ragged, toothless old
covered with
lice.
She shook with palsy and seemed
near death as she looked up at Glous’gap with clouded eyes
me some
and whined, “Please, Grandson, gather Glous’gap did
as she asked.
wood, she begged him truth, as
woman
After he brought her the
to help her get rid
Glous’gap could sense,
firewood.”
this
of the
lice that
swarmed over her but
poisons easily able to
kill
anyone
In
was no pathetic old
but Poug’tjin’skwes herself. Furthermore,
ordinary
lice.
it
was no
tiny devils full of
who came
in contact
with them.
Glous’gap told the old
woman
to
bend down before
him, and one by one he began to pluck the her
hair.
As he
flung each louse down,
porcupine or a toad. as she
The
old
woman, of
it
devil-lice
from
changed into
a
course, bent over
was, could not see what Glous’gap was doing. Each
HOW glous’gap SAVED
PINE
MARTEN AND MRS. BEAR
*
33
!
time he plucked
at
her hair, she would ask, “Have you
found one?”
And “
every time, Glous’gap would answer,
Basp Crush
it!”
she cackled each time, and at that,
Whenever
Glous’gap would crush a cranberry. that
have!”
“I
she heard
squishing sound, she was sure that Glous’gap was
little
covering his fingers with deadly poisons that would swiftly
him. As the
kill
pile
of crushed cranberries grew on the
numbers of porcupines and
floor of the lodge, so did the
under
toads. Glous’gap herded the creatures carefully
wooden bowl. Then he used tjin’skwes
drop off to
When
at last
his
powers to make Poug’-
sleep.
she awoke, Glous’gap was nowhere to be
and porcupines and toads were swarming across the
seen,
floor of the lodge. Poug’tjin’skwes
because to her If
her as she
slept.
as
Then
insulted her.
an enemy, he would have slain
She roared with anger
shape, a toweringly beautiful
some.
was doubly furious
way of thinking, Glous’gap had
he had truly feared her
own
a big
as
she took on her
woman, wild and
she gathered up her devil-friends and
plans to do battle with her
enemy Glous’gap another
4
made day.
.
Meanwhile, Glous’gap journeyed on narrow pass between two
fear-
hills.
He
until he
came
to a
was very watchful,
for
he was sure that Win’pe had other surprises in store for
him
besides Poug’tjin’skwes. Sure enough, there at the pass
two savage, giant dogs attacked him, but he two dogs
at
34
them.
*
The monster dogs were
set his
own
astonished to
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
two
see the
who
tiny creatures
looked
mouthful apiece suddenly grow
like they’d
make
tremendous
to
a
size,
snarling and baying and slavering.
Glous’gap had an unusual way of training his dogs.
When
he called them
knew
the dogs harder.
So
it
off, yelling
“Stop! That’s enough!”
these words were really the signal to fight
was
at that his loyal
this time. “Stop!”
shouted Glous’gap, and
dogs tore the monster hounds to
Soon Glous’gap came
bits.
to the top of a high hill covered
with golden birches and flaming maples.
Summer had
already turned to autumn, and Glous’gap was grateful for
warmed him He stopped
the northern sunlight that clearing and gazed across large
wigwam, and he
wicked people
Making to the
and
his
the land. Afar off he saw a
sighed, for he could foresee that
lived there,
way down
all
in a
and another
battle awaited
the rough slope and ledges, he
wigwam and found
there an old
their lovely daughters.
man and
him.
came
his wife
The young women came
out
and greeted the handsome young M’toulin or medicinewarrior with soft voices and winning smiles.
Now
it
used to be the custom
young woman
among our
to drape a string of delicious bear-entrail
sausages around the neck of a young sure enough, the daughters
strings of sausages.
enchanted, and
people for a
if
man
she admired, and
came toward Glous’gap bearing
But these particular sausages were
one of those
women had
succeeded in
draping a string of them around Glous’gap’s neck,
it
might
well have been the end of him.
The young women were unaware
HOW glous’gap SAVED
PINE
that Glous’gap
MARTEN AND MRS. BEAR
*
35
brought a new kind of magic into our world, and did not realize
he could see into their bad hearts.
They thought
they had tricked him completely, and they danced up to
him smiling and swaying
their slender bodies invitingly as
they waved the enchanted sausages in his direction. Glous’-
gap gaped and grinned like a
the
foolishly, acting for all the
young man who wanted very much
women
danced ever
world
to be courted.
closer, Glous’gap’s dogs,
who
As can
always smell magic afoot, began to growl. “
KousT Glous’gap shouted, which means “Stop!”
course, the dogs recognized that attack,
brush
own
into their
fire
exploding into
A
lips,
young women
at
burning eyes, and foul
battle followed, the likes of
been seen before
a
the witches burst
life,
dreadful forms, not lovely
but she-fiends with bloodied
breath.
as their signal to
and they sprang upon the young women. With
flash like a
all
word
Of
in the land of the
which had never
Dawn
people.
The
ground trembled, huge boulders splintered, and water sloshed out of the lakes. All the while, Glous’gap kept call-
ing gleefully to his dogs, “Stop, you hounds! Can’t you see these are
my
dogs fought
dear sisters?
Come
away, you bad dogs!”
fiercely until the witches ran off, shrieking
The and
cursing and sobbing.
Glous’gap then strode across the clearing and flap
of the wigwam. There
fully expecting to eat
stared at
him
*
he asked with
Would you two
Well then, here they
and
his wife,
Glous’gap for their supper. They
in disbelief as
“Are you hungry?
36
sat the old sorcerer
lifted the
are,
mock
care for
politeness,
some sausages?
and may you savor them!” With
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
that,
he looped the strings of enchanted sausages about
their necks, instantly rendering
them powerless. Then he
slew them with one blow, called his dogs to his side, and
went on
his way.
5
.
After hard journeying Glous’gap reached the Strait of
Kamsok
just as the first
snows were beginning to
Again he sang the whale-summoning song, and
a
fall.
whale
arose from the depths of the winter ocean to ferry
him
across the water. Glous’gap circled around Oun’a’mag’ik,
coming upon many old camps Win’pe and left
behind.
The
At one such
had planted another birchbark dish the secret marks
his beloved
much
had
of the camps were drifted over with
fires
snow, the ashes long cold.
From
his captives
upon
it,
place, Pine
Marten
for Glous’gap to find.
Glous’gap learned
how long
ones had been gone from that camp and
how
they were suffering as the slaves of Win’pe, and he
set his heart
even more firmly upon finding them.
lowed their
trail to
He
fol-
call
Cape
North, and there he found that the enemy party had
set off
Uk’tu’tun,
which people
only three days earlier for Uk’tuk’kam’kou, the great island
of Newfoundland. at least the trail
gap sang
It
was the very heart of winter now, but
was growing warmer. Once again Glous’-
his irresistible song,
and once again
whale appeared to carry him across the
Once he before he
a willing
sea.
landed, he had scarcely traveled a mile inland
knew he was nearing what he
found the still-smoking embers of
HOW glous’gap SAVED
sought, for he
a fire. Swiftly
he
PINE MARTEN AND MRS. BEAR
*
fol-
37
lowed the
trail until
Then Glous’gap
he came upon Win’pe’s encampment.
hid himself beneath the snow-laden
branches of a giant blue spruce and studied the situation.
Marten came out of the lodge and began
Pretty soon Pine
poking sadly around
deep snow for firewood.
in the
Glous’gap could see that Younger Brother was terribly thin
and shivering
in his scanty but
knew
mended.
was Mrs. Bear, of
It
Marten
help Pine
Marten was
clothes.
away who had kept those clothes
Glous’gap
right
well-mended
course, trying to her best to
survive captivity.
so deep in despair he did not even hear
Glous’gap softly signaling him. Finally, Glous’gap tossed a small stick at Pine Marten’s feet, and the young fellow
looked up in surprise. At
had
that
fallen
from
Marten
Glous’gap.
first
he thought
until
it
was
just a twig
a tree, but then he caught sight of
started to cry out “Elder Brother!” but
Glous’gap fiercely motioned him to be
“Wait
it
grows dark,
into the lodge. For now, just
“
go
he tell
silent.
said,
“and then
Nou’goum’i,
I’ll
come
my grand-
mother, that I’m here.”
Sure enough,
late that
Win’pe’s very lodge.
A
night Glous’gap stole toward
fresh
fall
of snow muffled his
approaching footsteps. Inside the lodge, the
was snoring
in the
warmest spot near the embers of the
Mrs. Bear, hearing
fire.
evil sorcerer
a tiny rustle
of movement
at
her
back, turned over and beheld Glous’gap by the light of the
dying ed,
fire.
She was so overjoyed
to see
him
that she faint-
and Glous’gap knelt beside her and cradled her shaggy
head
in his lap until she recovered.
Mrs. Bear whispered
how
hard Win’pe made her
very quietly to Glous’gap about
38
*
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
and Pine Marten work and what poor rations he fed them.
“Never mind, Grandmother,” Glous’gap whispered back. “Endure
and
we’ll
him
for just
soon have our revenge on Win’pe.”
Then he
hastily gave
and bade them both
snow had
one night longer, Nou’goum’i,
let
up,
some
instructions to Pine
to say nothing of his visit.
and
a
Marten
By then
the
half-moon was shining. Glous’gap
melted once again into the shadows between the snowladen spruces and pines.
Now every
morning of his
captivity Pine Marten’s first
job was to fetch the water for the whole
camp while he
tended Win’pe’s stinking, squalling devil-baby in gan’igan, or cradleboard. Glous’gap
on
this
break,
had told Marten that
day he must bring Win’pe the
could find. So
when Win’pe
Marten did not go
as
its a’ti-
filthiest
water he
kicked Marten awake at day-
he usually did to
fill
the buck-
ets
with new-fallen snow and bring them inside the lodge
to
melt into clean fresh water. Instead he shouldered the
cradleboard and went straight to a nearby swamp. There he
broke the thick
ice
and dipped up buckets from the oozy,
muddy bottom. Then
he crumbled old rabbit and deer
droppings into the thick, smelly water, and for good measure he threw in the matted hair of a dead
skunk he had
found. Ever so meekly, Pine Marten offered this foul concoction to his master.
Win’pe poured
it
sniffed at the reeking
cup suspiciously and then
out on the ground, swearing a blue streak. “Uk-
seF he spat, tossing the bucket angrily at Pine Marten.
and bring
me
“Go
clean water!”
HOW glous’gap SAVED
PINE
MARTEN AND MRS. BEAR
*
39
Instead, Pine Martin defied the furious sorcerer.
He
baby and
all,
shrugged off the cradleboard and threw
down
in the ashes next to the
fire.
it,
Win’pe’s wife screamed
and snatched up her bawling devil-child. Then Pine Martin ran pell-mell out of the lodge toward the snowy thicket
where Glous’gap
lay in hiding, calling out, “Elder
Brother! Elder Brother!”
Win’pe was
right behind him. His eyes
with anger, and the veins
and
you now! He’s
can’t help
the island where for
it’s
we
your turn to
left
die,
temples bulged.
at his
upon your precious
call
gleamed red
he screamed. “He
“
brother!
“Go ahead
far to the south,
mooning away on
him! Cry out
loud as you want,
you miserable
as
little
Glous’gap’s scheme worked. Pine
weasel!”
Marten
so aroused
Win’pe’s wrath that he lost the perfect calm control a sor-
command
cerer needs to
overcome by
Now Win’pe
own
magic was
rage.
Glous’gap stepped out of hiding and stood before
in
situation,
his
his evil forces. Win’pe’s
all
his shining power.
drew back
a
himself once again.
few paces
With
The
sorcerer, sizing
up the
to try to gain possession
of
great calm and steady will,
Glous’gap raised every drop of power within himself. As the magic stirred, Glous’gap
grew and grew
until he
tow-
ered far above the tallest pine, and the pines in those days
were
far taller
than the ones
we know. The Lord of Men
and Beasts laughed with delight
was
far
as
he shot upward until he
above the clouds, and he seemed to be heading
straight for the very sun. Far below, as
an ant
at Glous’gap’s
40
*
mighty
Win’pe cowered,
feet.
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
tiny
Glous’gap held
this quivering sorcerer
of the Partridge
people in great contempt because hed acted so underhand-
edly and treated decent people so badly, and thus he
scorned to fight any real warriors’ contest against him. Instead, Glous’gap reached lightly
with the
tip
down and tapped
of his maplewood bow,
the sorcerer as if
Win’pe
were a dog that needed to be disciplined. At once, Win’pe fell
dead.
“And
that’s that,” said
Glous’gap.
Glous’gap returned to his normal around
for Win’pe’s wife
no doubt gone
to join
size.
He
looked
and baby, but they had vanished,
some of
their evil relatives.
Then
Glous’gap called Mrs. Bear and Pine Marten and his two loyal
dogs to come out of hiding. They went about gather-
ing up food and blankets, and then the
dered their packs.
With
little
party shoul-
Glous’gap’s dogs racing joyfully
ahead, the three of them set out through the snow, heading
south on the long journey back to their island.
HOW glous’gap SAVED
PINE
MARTEN AND MRS. BEAR
*
41
GLOUS’GAP AND GRANDFATHER TURTLE Wodiriit atogagan Glousgapi
A
FTER THE FINAL
.
.
.
SHOWDOWN
foundland with Win’pe, the
on New-
evil sorcerer
the Partridge people, Glous’gap paddled his canoe
the
way over
the icy waters to Pictoug,
or, as
of all
the
The name of
English and French
say,
means “bubbling”
Micmac, and
in
Pictou.
it is
that place
named because
so
a
whirlpool churns nearby and the waters there are always frothy. In those days there
more than
a
hundred wigwams
lage dwelt an older
He was
was
encampment of
a winter
and
at Pictou,
man whom Glous’gap
in that vil-
truly loved.
called Mik’tjitj, or Turtle.
Now
Turtle was not a great
man by any means. He
wasn’t very good-looking, and he had few possessions.
He
People didn’t consider Turtle clever or witty or wise.
seemed
to have
stand out.
and past
The
no
talent or skill that
would cause him
others in the village thought
his prime.
But out of
all
him
poor, lazy,
others, Glous’gap chose
Turtle to be his adopted nigsgamitj or grandfather. ,
truth
is
that Turtle
was
a
wonderful
one but Glous’gap ever bothered over, life
to
storyteller,
to listen to
he had a kind heart, and he bore
all
The
though no
him. More-
the hardships of
so good-naturedly that Glous’gap couldn’t help loving
him.
He
resolved to help Turtle rise in the world.
Glous’gap himself, of course, was
who
a
handsome man
carried himself proudly. Indeed, he
admired by
all
the
women,
old and
arrived at Pictou, every family their lodge, but Glous’gap Mik’tjitj, his
young
wanted him
was especially alike.
When
he
to be a guest at
begged off so he could
beloved Grandfather Turtle. Turtle
stay
with
knew
the old-time lore, and his stories delighted Glous’gap.
all
He
truly loved this elder.
Now
as
is
usual at
Micmac
winter encampments, a
great feast and celebration were planned.
months, the people usually traveled 44
*
During the warm
in small parties to
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
hunt, fish, and gather plant food. Winter was the time
when
they drew together in larger numbers around the
fires
and shared many things. They would sing the
Gathering Song together and make
They would
recite to
been born and
all
snows had
last
their
Winter Count.
one another the names of all
who had
fallen. If
who had
died in their families since the
someone had brought down an
unusually large moose, or
if
there
had been
meteor
a big
shower, or bright flarings-up of the Northern Lights, they
noted
of
that. If there
eels or
salmon
had been an
especially
at a certain place, that
Winter Count helped the people keep
good or poor run was
told as well.
in touch
with each
other and record what was going on in the world around
them year
after year.
Many other
doings happened at these wintertime com-
ings-together, including lots of
There were snowball matches, and a ers
game
saw who could
fights,
games and competitions.
snowshoe
called snow-snake, in
slide a staff
that
,
a very
was not
Then
rough-and-tumble game
for the faint
which the play-
painted like a snake the
thest distance along an icy trough.
touwe
races, wrestling
of heart,
as
you
there
was bagahockey
like field shall
far-
hear
later.
Glous’gap himself didn’t care to do any of these things, but he said to Turtle, “Grandfather, part in
aren’t
you going to take
some of these games? All the young women
will
be
there watching, you know, and I’ve been thinking that you
shouldn’t have to live
all
by yourself. Haven’t you ever
thought about getting married?” Grandfather Turtle shook his head and smiled
“Oh, no,” he
ruefully.
replied. “I’m afraid I’m too poor, too old,
glous’gap and grandfather turtle
*
45
and
just too plain.
I
think
lodge and smoke
it’s
my
better if I just
my
here alone in
sit
pipe and think over the stories from
the old times.What do
I
woman?
have to offer any
I
don’t
even have any clothes that are fine enough for feast-going.” “Clothes!” Glous’gap exclaimed. “Is that really
stopping you from joining the fun? fine
I
can stitch up a
mantle and leggings for you in no time, and they won’t
ever wear out, either. to
Why,
all that’s
make
a
I tell
new man of you
“Is that so,
you, Grandfather, is
some new
all it
will take
clothes!”
He
Grandson?” mused Grandfather Turtle.
looked thoughtful. “Can you make over the insides of a person as well?” he asked shyly.
“By the Great Beaver!” Glous’gap avowed. “That’s harder job, but
it
can be done! If
things right in this world,
promise you I’ll
I’d
I
do
weren’t so busy setting this
it
Grandfather. Before
this,
a
minute. But
I
leave this village
I
bring about the transformation you’re wondering about.
For now, though,
let’s start
for taking part in the
my magic belt, Once
many
and
with your
games,
you’ll
do
all
new
clothes.
you have to do
is
And
as
borrow
well.”
Turtle tied on Glous’gap’s belt, he appeared
Then Glous’gap
years younger than his true age.
dressed Turtle in the mantle and leggings he
out of soft deerhide.
The
clothes were
made
for
him
most becoming, and
suddenly Turtle seemed not only young but good-looking as well.
Glous’gap promised him, “From
father Turtle,
when you walk
the handsomest of
you
will be
all
men.
in
now
on,
human form you
When
vou walk
one of the hardest creatures
as
to kill
Grandwill
an animal,
on the
of the earth because of your patience and toughness.”
46
*
be
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
face
With
Glous’gap’s words of promise in his heart, Turtle set out to join in the feasting and the games.
Now
the sagama or chief of the Pictou had three
daughters. All were lovely, but the youngest was thought to
be the most beautiful
ly
to kill
Land of
in all the
young men of Pictou desired
Sunrise. All the
vowed
woman
who won
anyone
her,
the
and they
her hand. Because he usual-
kept to himself, Turtle had never seen this young
woman, but
that
was about
to change.
Turtle took part in several games, and just as Glous’gap
promised he made
a
good showing
at
snow-snake and
snowball throwing. Afterwards, the people staged a give-
away ceremony to
watch
in the center
as families
goods and
set
of the
village. Turtle
stopped
brought out armloads of different
them down
for others to
choose from. There
were fur robes and berrying baskets, quillwork boxes and clam-shell necklaces, fishing-spears and bowls of dried
meat and corn. The her father’s
wigwam
chief’s
youngest daughter came out of
carrying a nicely tanned moosehide to
contribute to the giveaway. She was slender and lithe, and
she smiled sideways at the handsome, young-looking Turtle as she walked past
him
to place the
moosehide on
the ground with the other goods. Turtle could not take his
eyes off her. All through the night while the feasting,
drumming, and singing went on and
on, Turtle kept steal-
ing glances at her.
Late that night Turtle returned to his lodge, where he
magic
With
handed Glous’gap back
his
youthful appearance
away, and he looked his true age
once again. But
as
fell
belt.
that, all his
Glous’gap had promised, Turtle
glous’gap and grandfather turtle
*
47
remained handsome,
He
and Glous’gap
glow of their
fire.
and shared
sat
Then Turtle
gap. “I’ve seen the one I
way of
in the
I
want
a very dignified elder.
revealed his heart to Glous’for
my wife,”
he sighed, “but
have no hope of winning her.”
“Have courage, Grandfather,” Glous’gap you remember that mation
in
The
your
said.
promised to bring about
I
“Don’t
a transfor-
life?”
very next day Glous’gap went as an envoy to plead
Turtle’s cause.
He
took a
to the chief’s lodge,
lot
of ouVnap'skouk or ,
where he proposed Turtle
for the youngest daughter.
little
wed. But
this
as a
husband
surprising, because Turtle
had no great reputation. Moreover,
young woman
wampum,
The young woman’s mother was
quick to agree. That was a
a
low
a pipe beside the
it
was most unusual
to be married before her older sisters
mother was
when he vowed
wise,
that Turtle
for
were
and she trusted Glous’gap
would make her youngest
daughter the best of husbands. She accepted the
wampum
as her daughter’s bride-price.
The
wam
chief’s
daughter built a birchbark-covered wig-
and made up
boughs covered with all
reluctant to
a
marriage-bed of pine and spruce
a thick
white bearskin. She was not
marry the handsome young
noticed at the games, the one
who
man
at
she had
kept casting glances at
her during the giveaway that followed. But
when
it
came
time for the marriage to be celebrated, there stood Turtle,
beaming with pride and happiness looking his true age.
The young
to be sure, yet
now
bride was dismayed, but
all
the arrangements had already been made, and so the two
were married. That evening, husband and wife and 48
*
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
Glous’gap were feasted
at
her family’s lodge with a wed-
ding supper of dried berries, deer meat, and corn soup.
Then life
own
Turtle led his bride to their
lodge to begin their
together.
Weeks
By and
passed, and the winter wore on.
began
Turtle’s wife
to think that her
by,
new husband was
rather lazy. Instead of going off on hunting parties with the
other men, he preferred to spend the cold and snowy days sitting ries
by the
and
fire
were pleasant
was getting very Finally, the
and scolded,
much
telling stories.
to listen to, but
as a scrap
“Oh,
all
their larder
young woman placed her hands on her hips
“Just look
both soon
meantime
sto-
low.
around you, Turtle! There’s not so
of meat in
this lodge!
yourself and go out hunting as a we’ll
She thought the
man
If is
you don’t
bestir
supposed to do,
starve!”
right,
my
and he strapped on
dearest,” said Turtle good-naturedly,
snowshoes, took up his
his
bow and
arrow, and stepped outside into the snow. His wife slipped
out of their ly
wigwam
going hunting
after
him
he
said.
as
Turtle, setting off for the
Now
it
takes
to
certain he
a
while to find their balance
poor old fellow hadn’t gone very
own snowshoes and
real-
at a brisk pace.
on snowshoes, and Turtle was way out of
his
was
Sure enough, there went
woods
most people
make
far before
practice.
The
he tripped over
landed FLUMP! in a snowbank. His
wife looked on with disgust to see Turtle spluttering on his
back with
his
arms and
legs
waving wildly
in the
air.
She
ran straight back to her family’s lodge and told her mother,
“That Turtle you made
me marry
is
absolutely worthless!
glous’gap and grandfather turtle
#
49
Why, he
even snowshoe straight!” She wept bitterly
can’t
to think of
the fine, capable Pictou boys she might have
all
wed.
But her mother smiled, and went on with her sewing. “Don’t worry,” she told her daughter.
be a good husband
A
few days
yet.
in.
will turn out to
to be patient.”
Glous’gap said to Turtle, “Tomorrow
later
there will be a great
You just have
“He
game of bagatouwe, and you must join
But because you’ve made enemies of
all
the
young men
here at Pictou by marrying the chief’s youngest daughter, they’re
going to try to
on you and
pile
try to
you during the game. They’ll
all
knock you down and trample you
to
kill
death, and then they can claim
Now,
this attack
is
was
it
just an accident.
going to happen when the play has
reached a spot very near your father-in-law’s place. So you
may
escape them,
Pm
going to give you the power to jump
high over that lodge. You’ll be able to do
The
trouble.
sorry about
third time, though, won’t be easy,
it,
came
All
but
that’s just the
way
game was hard-fought, and at
and
faces.
The
ball.
and
Pm
it is.”
try to kill Turtle.
The The
the players swatted and
each other with their
the squirrel-gut
with no
Glous’gap predicted.
to pass just as
young men of Pictou did indeed
smashed
this twice
sticks,
vying for control of
Bruising blows landed on arms, legs,
players were
all
came running through the
battered and bloody as they
village.
When
they finally
reached the lodge of the chief, they began to crowd in on Turtle.
To escape them,
Turtle jumped, and the
jump
turned into a soaring leap that took him sailing high above the
wigwam. He landed 50
*
safely in the soft
snow on the
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
other side, just as Glous’gap said he would. Twice he did
angry
this as the
men
tried to crush
him by
their
and number, but the third time he got caught
There hung poor
poles.
ing from the
fire
weight
in the lodge
Turtle, dangling in the
smoke
ris-
below.
Glous’gap was seated inside the lodge, visiting with the
He
chief.
heard a commotion above and looked up through
the smokehole to see Turtle suspended there. “Grand-
Glous’gap called up to him.
father!”
Chief of the
into the Great
turtles!
“I will
You
now make you have
shall
many
descendents after you!” Turtle had no choice.
He just hung
there,
and Glous’-
He smoked him
gap smoked him
for a
over that
so long that his skin toughened into a
hard
on
fire for
good long time.
and the marks of that smoking can
shell,
turtles’ shells to this day.
Turtle’s intestines except for
he destroyed the
be seen
Glous’gap then removed
all
one short length of gut. Then
rest.
Turtle cried out in pain and
fear,
“Grandson, you’re
me!”
killing
But Glous’gap
replied,
“No, Grandfather! I'm giving
you
a long
life!
Now
you
will
fire
and no
feel pain.
You
will be able to live
water, wherever
gave thanks
The
still felt
at Glous’gap’s
him just
be able to pass through the
on land or
in
you choose.”
Mik’tjitj the Turtle
ing to
still
in time, for
scorched and sore, but he
words. All this power was com-
soon he would have need of it.
very next day, right before
all
the
young men of
Pictou were setting off on a hunt, Glous’gap said to them,
“There
is
one among you
who
will
come out
GLOUS’GAP AND GRANDFATHER TURTLE
far
*
ahead in
51
The young men
this day’s hunt.”
tain
smiled, each one cer-
all
he would prove to be the best hunter, and then they
headed into the
forest.
“Soon those men
Only Turtle
will seek
Glous’gap warned him.
He jumped up
Upon
lingered behind.
once more to take your hearing
this,
life,”
Turtle nodded.
and soared into another magical
flight,
He
passing high over the heads of the hunting party.
There
alighted deep in the forest, far ahead of the others.
he brought beside the
down
trail
on snowshoes.
he
a fine big
knew
When
moose, and he dragged
the other
men would moose
carcass,
ing his pipe and waving cheerily to them.
By
were cold and exhausted from their long
trek.
Turtle sitting there with his moose,
be following
came upon him,
the hunting party
there he sat, leaning back against the
over
it
this
smoking
smok-
time they
They beheld his pipe
and
looking so well-rested, and then they thought about the beautiful wife he had awaiting
him
at
home, and
it
all
drove them wild with envy. Together, they plotted once again to
kill
him.
Glous’gap had come along with the hunters, and he was getting ready to head back to Pictou. people’s hearts
it,
will build a bonfire
I
promise you will
feel
no pain.
the roasting doesn’t work, next they’ll threaten to
drown you. Beg and plead with them not and beseech them not
come
and throw
thinking to roast you. Grandfather, go along
with what happens, and
When
could read
and minds, so he took Turtle aside and
warned him, “These men you into
He
now
to think that
to
throw you
drowning
is
in the
to
do
it.
Implore
water until they
the one sure
method of
murdering you.” Then Glous’gap said goodbye to Turtle 52
*
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
and
set off back
Again,
toward Pictou.
happened
all
just as
Glous’gap had foretold.
Glous’gap had no sooner gotten out of sight than the
young men
built a raging fire
and tossed Turtle into
it.
Tired after his long exciting day, Turtle simply rolled over and went to sleep there at the heart of the flames.
When
the fire burned
down and
at last
men
heard him
call out,
astonished young
wood!
mighty cold night, and
a
It’s
he awoke, the “Bring more
have no desire to
I
freeze to death!”
Then
those
and began
men
to argue
snatched Turtle out of the spent
among themselves about what
fire
they
should do with him. “Let’s drown him,” said one fellow.
Hearing
this,
them, “Please,
my brothers!
thing but that! cliff,
Turtle began to
Chop me
whimper and plead with
Don’t drown me! Oh, oh, any-
me off a drown me in the
into bits, or toss
you wish, but please don’t
as
Of course,
the shore. Turtle
fought bravely, tearing up trees and clawing
him
use.
They paddled
a
the ocean. Certain
back to shore,
now
sight, far in the cold gray
that Turtle
forced
as
they
depths of
was dead, they canoed
rejoicing.
next day brought a sudden thaw, and the
men remained camped on slog their
it
long way from shore
and threw him overboard, and they laughed watched him sink from
but
at rocks,
The young men overpowered him and
into a canoe.
The
sea!”
they resolved to do just that, and they dragged
him kicking and screaming toward was no
high
way back
young
the shoreline, not wanting to
to Pictou
through
all
the slush and
melting snow. Around noon, one of them spotted some-
glous’gap and grandfather turtle
*
53
thing like a dot on a rock about a mile offshore.
kind of creature can that be?” the young selves,
men
and two of them volunteered to take
and investigate. The rock rose about and
waterline,
as
they drew close to
it,
“What
asked thema
canoe out
a foot
above the
they could see that
dot was none other than Mik’tjitj, Grandfather Turtle, by
no means drowned but sunning himself and enjoying the pleasant break in the weather.
up
to his rock
When
he saw them paddling
he was sure they were coming to recapture
him, and thus without so
much
as a farewell Turtle slipped
off his basking place into the cold salt water and
away. In
memory
endured,
all
that
of the captivity and the abuse Mik’tjitj
turtles slip
way whenever they Turtle
wife.
swam back
By shooting
that
themselves into the water in just see
someone coming.
to Pictou
again, since
was plain
it
still
lived happily
to
with his
to her that
all
was harmonious
that Turtle possessed
in
him
never dared to bother
them
he
have plenty of time for
and from that time on
The young men
their lodge.
and
moose he had proven
could provide well for her and telling stories,
swam
some
important magic. In the autumn Turtle’s wife bore him a son,
and
The Mik’tjitj
life
seemed very good.
following spring, Glous’gap dropped by to
and
his family.
the world to rights, but
He
had been busy
now he wanted
ther and his wife and their baby.
as usual setting
to see his grandfa-
While Glous’gap and
Turtle were sharing a pipe, the child suddenly began to
“Oh-wah! Oh-wah!” the
little
comfort
54
at a loss as to
his little son.
*
cry.
one shrieked. His mother
was off gathering wood, and Turtle was to
visit
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
how
“Don’t you
know what your own
child
saying?”
is
Glous’gap asked Turtle sternly
“Indeed
Grandson,” said Turtle with
don’t,
I
bewilderment of
new
a
father, “unless
perhaps he
ing the language of the spirits of the
which no one
else
“Humph,” at Turtle’s
speak-
the mous’i’gisk
,
retorted Glous’gap, feigning great surprise
bafflement.
ine that’s the
same
enough
plain
“It’s
he’s saying
to
me
‘Oh-wah! Oh-wah!’ and
‘oh’wahn, oh-wahn.’
as
haven’t forgotten that’s the
word
that he I
imag-
Surely you
egg in our language?”
for
holding the screaming child, Turtle’s face furrowed
with concern. “But Glous’gap,
where
is
the
knows.”
wants eggs, for
Still
air,
all
to find
any eggs,” he
I
don’t have the least idea
said.
“Well, try digging in the sand right around here, Grandfather.
Maybe some
So Turtle
will turn up,”
Glous’gap told him.
laid his little son
bearskin robe and begin to dig in his lodge.
his astonishment,
and he turned them over
sorts,
at
To
them.
He
looked up
grinned and winked
at
down carefully on a the warm sand around
he found in his
many
eggs of
hands and marveled
Glous’gap, but Glous’gap just
at
Then
him.
Turtle boiled one of the
eggs until the insides were soft and runny, and he fed his little son. Sure child’s
enough,
their
it
quieted the
mother soon got home, much
Ever since that
own
Glous’gap for
all
little
and
to
one, and the
sand to keep
Turtle’s descendents
the magic he
it
to Turtle’s relief.
day, turtles lay eggs in the
race going,
all
worked on
still
honor
their ancestor’s
behalf.
glous’gap and grandfather turtle
*
55
.
GLOUS’GAP AND THE
WATER MONSTER Wo din it atogagan
Glous'gapi
.
.
N THE EARLY DAYS when Glous’gap
I the very
first
Micmac
ple everything they well.
village,
he taught the peo-
needed to know
From him they
learned
created
how
in order to live
to stalk deer
and
how
to catch salmon,
wams and sew them which
how
and
to build fires
up wig-
set
clothing from buckskin. Glous’gap
plants were
good
showed
and pointed out
to eat,
which ones were poisonous, and others which could be
made
into medicines to heal their bodies
taught them the names of
all
He
the stars.
songs of great power and showed them
when
speak well
them the
art
of war and the
had
how
art
way
spirits.
He
taught them
how
they might
they met together in council.
they learned the proper
Creator and
and
He
taught
of keeping peace. From him
to
make
their prayers to the
one another. The people
to be kind to
the knowledge they needed, and they dwelt togeth-
all
er happily. All
Now stream.
was going
this first
well, just as
Micmac
village
was
built beside a
always flowed abundantly with pure icy water,
It
and the people were grateful
for
But one day
it.
ran dry. There was nothing but a
found
in the streambed.
when
the
autumn
Glous’gap intended.
autumn
little
it
suddenly
slimy ooze to be
“Perhaps the water will flow again
rains return,” the elders said, but
arrived the streambed only
when
became choked with
drifted leaves. In the springtime
when
and most brooks ran
stream remained a slug-
swiftly, that
the snows melted
gish trickle.
“What last
shall
we
do?” the people asked themselves.
At
young man
the elders counciled and decided to send a
northward toward the source of the spring to discover what he could.
The man they chose walked along streambed for a long time.
It
was
a dreary journey, for all
the leaves were sere and rattled in the breeze.
58
*
beside the
Dead
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
fish lay
No
rotting on the dry banks of the stream.
birdsong
brightened his steps and no squirrels scolded him from the
branches, for
the creatures had abandoned their old
all
homes and gone
in search
He
of water.
very lonely
felt
walking along those desolate banks.
At
the
last
man came
where he was
to a village
prised to see that the people were not like
had webbed hands and
for they
human
hearts like real
They
beings,
did not have
beings, either, for they were selfish
and unfriendly and did nothing into their midst.
feet.
human
sur-
to
welcome
the stranger
The man looked around him and
noticed
that in the village of the webbed-footed ones the stream
widened out just
a
little,
though the water was
and stinking. The man was very and asked
still
brackish
thirsty after his journey
to be given just a half-cup of that foul water.
“No, we
can’t give
you even
a single
drop unless our
great chief gives us permisssion,” the webbed-footed ones replied.
for
him
“He
a very great chief indeed,
is
and
all
the water
is
alone.”
“Just
where
is
this great chief of yours?” the
man
asked.
“Follow the stream further north, further north, further north” said the people of the you’ll
webbed hands and
did as he was told and walked along until he
spied something looming ahead of him.
with terror
as
Then he shook
he saw the great chief of whom the webbed
ones had spoken. This creature was as big
with a grinning mouth that stretched
His yellow eyes stared out of
mous
“and
be sure to come upon him.”
The man
ear.
feet,
his
as a
from ear
a mile
head
mountain,
like
to
two enor-
pine knots. His swollen body was covered with ugly
glous’gap and the water monster
*
59
warts. This creature
had made himself a huge burrow
source of the stream and reservoir.
Now
streambed.
He
dammed
are
to create a great
almost no water made
had
its
also fouled the reservoir
at the
man and
way
to the
and made
it
so
oily surface.
The
roared, “Little fellow,
why
poisonous that fetid mists hung above
monster glared
up
it all
at the
its
you here?”
The man gathered up
his courage
and
said, “I
come
from downstream, where our only brook has run dry because you are hoarding
all
the water.
us some, and please, while you’re at
making
it
The
so thick
it,
We need you to give would you
also stop
and muddy?”
creature only blinked and said with a deep
rum-
bling voice:
I don't care I don't care I don't care! For water for water
;
,
for water .
go elsewhere
The man and
all
said,
“We
really
need the water.
Our
the animals and plants are dying of thirst.”
But the monster only
replied,
Go away
Go away Go away! Just begone
60
*
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
children
!
begone
begone or Til swallow
swallow
swallow
you today
And
with that the monster opened his cavernous
mouth wide.
Inside his
maw
the
man
many
could see the
things the monster had already swallowed, bears and pine trees
and moose, even whole
blinked at the
man
a
few times, opened
At
flicked out his pale, sticky tongue. lost
every
last
Back
at
mouth, and
his
home he all
“We
told the people,
shall
do?” they cried.
fled.
are lost!
the water for himself, and if
we
man
poor
this the
swallow us whole, village and
“What
the monster
shred of courage, and he turned and
creature wants fight, he’ll
Then
villages!
This
we
try to
live
with-
all.”
“We
cannot
out water!”
Even from
afar,
Glous’gap could see the grieving
lage of drought-ridden people.
make
He
said to himself, “I
vil-
must
that stream flow again, so the people can have water.”
He covered his body with paint red as fresh heart’s blood. He hung two huge clamshells from his earlobes for earrings. He stuck a Glous’gap prepared himself for
battle.
hundred black eagle feathers on one
side
of his scalplock
He
paint-
ed bright yellow rings around his eyes, and then he
made
and
a
hundred white eagle feathers on the
himself twelve feet
tall
and screwed up
other.
his face into a fierce
glous’gap AND THE WATER MONSTER
*
61
mask of
anger.
He stomped
the ground and let out his
mighty war-cry, and earthquakes shook the Land of the
Then he snapped
Sunrise.
off a huge mountain with his
hand, and from that mountain he chipped himself off a giant flint knife sharp as a weasel’s tooth.
was
ple
when he appeared
them by bit
of
he
he strode upstream.
as
want water!” Glous’gap
“I
at last
Lightning played about him and eagles circled
ready.
above him
Now
his
told the
webbed-footed peo-
in their village.
He
so frightened
sudden presence that they brought him
muddy
Glous’gap said
from himself
water. as
“I’ll
get
more and better water!”
he dashed the ladle of
in distaste.
And
a little
stale
water away
so he continued upstream,
where he confronted the monster.
The
creature eyed Glous’gap and grumbled, “Little
man, what do you want?” Glous’gap hollered back,”I want good water and plenty
of it for
my people!” At
this,
the creature only laughed:
Ho-ho! Ho-ho! All the waters are mine All the waters are mine!
Go away! Go away
Or Yll kill you
today
“Slimy lump of mud!” shouted Glous’gap, and he
upon
his
enemy, and they fought
in a battle that
very mountains to their roots and set
swamps
shook the afire
lurid light.
62
*
fell
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
with
The
creature
opened
Glous’gap, but Glous’gap tallest pine, so
contain him.
huge
maw
made himself
to gulp
down
than the
far taller
even that gaping monster-mouth could not
Then Glous’gap drew from
flint knife,
and
belly open.
A
wound and
his
in
one swift motion he
torrent of
carved
a
his belt his great
the monster’s
slit
foaming water gushed from the
new path through
the dry land.
Glous’gap smiled to see the deep clear river rushing past the village of the people of the
the village of the
webbed hands and
Micmac, and onward
Ocean. Nevermore need anyone go
Once monster
in his
to the great Sunrise
thirsty.
mighty hand, and he squeezed, and
it
He
squeezed the belly-wound
mended, and he kept on squeezing
monster became very small, person’s
past
the waters were set free Glous’gap grasped the
squeezed, and squeezed. shut so
feet,
fist.
swamp where
Then it
little
until the
more than the
size
of a
he flung the creature into a nearby
leapt off into the cattails,
still
croaking
“Go away! Go away!” The greedy water-monster got squeezed right down into a bullfrog, and even now Bullfrog’s skin
is
wrinkled because Glous’gap squeezed him
so tightly.
glous’gap and the water monster
*
63
HOW THE SACRED
WAS BROUGHT TO THE MICMAC PIPE
Wodiriit atogagan Glous'gapi
U
SUALLY, Te’am
the
moose
.
.
.
eats only plants.
His very name comes from the Micmac words
Te’a’mous’e,
meaning he
time long ago
a giant
strips things off trees.
But one
man-eating moose began
to
destroy the villages of the
moose Glous’gap had the days
Micmac
made
accidentally
when he was busy
people. It was the very
too large back in
creating the animals,
and now
the people were paying dearly for Glous’gap’s mistake.
The
moose would suddenly appear when the
least
With
expecting him.
would crush wigwams
his
villagers
huge hooves, the great creature
to the left
and to the
right.
men, women, and children ran screaming from homes, the moose would snatch them up jaws and chew them to bloody
on the lost
people’s flesh. All
were
bits.
The
their ruined
in his
him
fat
elders
and medicine-
They
decid-
messenger to Glous’gap, the powerful
M’toulin or Spirit Warrior, to ask
massive
every village had
people held a council to determine what to do. a
When
That moose grew
afraid, for
beloved relatives and friends.
ed to send
were
him of
tell
their plight
and
to help.
Now when
people go to seek the help of Glous’gap,
they must prepare themselves for a long journey, for Glous’gap’s lodge
is
He may be camped middle of
in the
seldom to be found
on
in the
a reef off the coast or
a lake.
He may
same
on a pine
it
was
islet
be fishing on a sandy
beach or hunting in the deep woods. Wherever he usually takes
place.
no fewer than seven years
to find
is,
it
him, and so
for this messenger.
At
last,
the messenger found Glous’gap on the shores
of a blue lake ringed with pines. As he drew near the camp, a great
honking racket rose up.
It
Canada watch-geese, sounding
was Glous’gap’s flock of the alarm and warning
Glous’gap of a stranger’s approach.
66
*
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
Thanks
to his loyal geese, Glous’gap
welcome the messenger
warmed themselves by co,
into his
the
Glous’gap asked the messenger
a pipe
of tobac-
why he had come. He
listened carefully to the man’s story about
Micmac
to
wigwam. After they had
and shared
fire
was waiting
how
the
man-eating moose. Then
lived in dread of the
Glous’gap sighed and arose, saying,
“I
must
set things
right for the people.”
Glous’gap took up his maplewood bow, slung his quiver of magic arrows across his back, and led the messen-
down
ger
As they
beached.
paddled
to the lakeshore
in their
Now
set
where
his
white canoe was
out across the lake, Glous’gap’s geese
wake, honking farewell.
another remarkable thing about seeking Glous’-
gap’s help
is
though
this:
it
may
take seven years to find his
lodge, the return journey takes but seven days, no matter
how
far the seeker has traveled.
later
when
And
so
it
was only
a
week
the two paddled up to the messenger’s village.
big crowd of people lined the shore to greet
them and
A
fol-
lowed Glous’gap and the messenger to the clearing where the elders and medicine-people sat in council.
The
had more bad news
elders
to
tell.
In the seven
years the messenger had been gone, not only had the
moose continued a giant eagle,
to ravage the land, but a second monster,
had joined him! This eagle had taken
swooping down on people, snatching them up talons,
and carrying them off
where she them.
tore
them
in her
to his nest far to the west,
apart with her cruel beak and ate
The Micmac were
HOW THE SACRED
to
powerless against these monsters,
PIPE WAS
BROUGHT TO THE MICMAC
*
67
and even the bravest trembled and glanced nervously about as the elders told these terrible things to Glous’gap.
When
he had heard
council and said, “I have
Then Glous’gap body red
all,
the M’toulin stood before the
come
in
answer to your prayer.”
prepared for battle.
as blood,
He
which our people do only when they
preparing for the most desperate combat.
up
bow and
his
track the
moose
painted his whole
his quiver
Then he
With
gathered
of magic arrows and began to
inland. It wasn’t hard to pick
of the moose’s hoofprints was the
for each
are
up the
size
trail,
of a large
moose was heading
far-
After several days’ journeying, Glous’gap at
last
pond.
each great
stride, the
ther and farther west.
caught up to the monster. clearing, tree
He was
browsing on maple
standing in a large
leaves,
uprooting a whole
with each bite and laying waste to the beautiful
woodland. His dewlap was dripping with human blood,
and
all
about him on the floor of the clearing lay the
shattered bones of his victims.
would pause and
make
sure
sniff the
Now
wind
and again the moose
in his fiery nostrils to
no enemy was about.
Glous’gap crouched in the shelter of seed-pine and studied the situation.
He
a
gnarled old
didn’t see
how
he
could ever manage to get within shooting range of the
moose without the monster catching wind of him just then a cheerful voice at his feet said,
my
brother?”
It
was Gopher. From the
he had been watching Glous’gap “Perhaps,
68
*
little
size
“May
I
first.
But
help you,
safety of his tunnel
up the giant moose.
brother,” Glous’gap replied. “I need a
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
way
to sneak
up on that moose so
can get close enough to
I
shoot him.”
“Good!” Gopher exclaimed. “He’s always stomping around here and ruining you.
my
tunnels!
burrow right under where
I’ll
I’ll
be glad to help
he’s eating.
Will that
brother,” Glous’gap said,
and with
do?”
“Of
course,
little
made himself
that he
seven inches
Gopher’s tunnel. His
Gopher
led the way,
friend’s tail in order still
bow and
so he could
into
fit
arrows shrank as well.
and Glous’gap held on
tightly to his
not to get lost in the darkness. You can
see his handprint at the tip of Gopher’s tail to this day.
The burrowing seemed dank and
worked on
it
to take forever.
The
tunnel was
and the thick odors of wet loam and
airless,
mold made
leaf-
hard for Glous’gap to breathe. But Gopher
industriously, and at last he stopped and
declared, “This
Then he began
the place!”
is
and soon popped through air
tall
to dig
to the surface. Light
upward
and fresh
streamed into the tunnel, and Glous’gap was very glad
to be able to see again.
found themselves In
all
He
directly
and Gopher peered upward and
under the giant moose’s
he does, Glous’gap never
even though the shot looked monster’s underbelly.
He
acts rashly.
belly.
This time,
he carefully studied the
easy,
noticed that the animal was not
covered with the coarse hair of an ordinary moose.
monster moose’s hide looked
some other hard
stone.
trate that armor!
Gopher, the
little
HOW THE SACRED
as if
Not even
When
it
a
The
was made out of flint or
magic arrow could pene-
Glous’gap pointed this out to
animal scrambled out of the hole, shinnied
PIPE
WAS BROUGHT TO THE MICMAC
*
69
up one of the moose’s hind
all,
and
in
Now and
delicately that the
no time Gopher was
He was
heart.
moose never
safely
back
flinty
so agile
him
felt
at
in the hole.
Glous’gap nocked an arrow to his bow, took aim,
let fly.
spot
and gnawed away the
by the monster’s
hair in a circle right
and gnawed so
legs,
The
flashing arrow
went
straight to the bald
Gopher had made and lodged deeply
in the moose’s
very heart.
The moose
out a thunderous bellow that echoed
let
He
throughout the northern woodlands.
looked about in
searing pain until he spotted the tiny figures of Glous’gap
and Gopher cowering
up the ground with enemies.
north,
As
the
Gopher
in their hole.
Then he began
moose gouged an enormous furrow frantically
began tunneling
as the
to the
to the east.
moose plowed another giant
furrow, this time in a northerly direction,
ward
plow
his massive antlers, trying to get at his
Again earth flew wildly
Gopher
to
and once again
too switched directions, tunneling madly south-
huge
to escape the
antlers.
Glous’gap came right
behind Gopher, pausing only to shoot more arrows into the
doomed moose, mark
in his
until four arrows
mighty
up the ground,
until
face of the earth. freely
heart. Still the
he had made
But the
all
told
had found
moose went on plowing five vast
creature’s
gouges on the
blood was flowing
now, and soon he dropped to the ground.
dying breath, flecks of blood frothed from his at
long
last
he lay
as a weasel’s tooth,
*
With each
nostrils,
and
still.
Then Glous’gap drew
70
their
forth his great flint knife, sharp
and cut off the moose’s proud
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
antlers.
Leaving the meat for Gopher, Glous’gap said goodbye
and
his little friend
show
the people
antlers
on
the woods, a huge
him, and suddenly Glous’gap thousands of feet into the
he could
air,
shadow
over
fell
himself snatched up
felt
antlers
about the giant eagle.
all
to claim another victim.
and
Now
all!
Glous’gap
she had
come
She flew off westward toward her
planning to feed Glous’gap to her hungry
clifftop aerie,
baby
his shoulders so
what had become of their dreaded enemy.
As he loped through
had forgotten
of the
set off for the eastern villages
Micmac, carrying the
to
eaglets.
When
the eagle dropped Glous’gap into her nest,
Glous’gap sprang instantly to his
Using the fledglings.
antlers as a
The mother
war
feet.
club,
he began to beat off the
eagle circled back to help her
young, and Glous’gap took a mighty swing with the antlers
and crushed her
skull, killing her.
eagles so badly that
it
He
young
scared those
stunted their growth, and that
is
why
today there are no more giant eagles in our land.
Glous’gap climbed out of the nest and made his way
down
the
cliff.
At
its
foot he discovered the broken bones
and torn bodies of the many people off by the eagle.
The blood of the
who had been
carried
victims had soaked into
the ground and turned into a beautiful red stone. Glous’gap
picked up a piece of it and fashioned the sort
we
call
goundovSsen.
the red stone and
wrapped
it
Then he
it
into a pipe-bowl of
gathered up more of
up along with the
bundle he made from the carcass of the
eagle.
antlers in a
Once
again
he set off eastward, bringing the bundle back to the
HOW THE SACRED
PIPE WAS
BROUGHT TO THE MICMAC
*
71
Micmac
villages.
Upon
his return, the people
thronged to
when he showed them
greet him, and they marveled
and the red stone.
antlers, the eagle carcass,
“From now on you need never
fear the
moose
or the
Glous’gap told the people. “This red stone
eagle,”
the
blood of your ancestors. From
it,
you
will
make
is
pipes.
the
This
will carry
it
with
you wherever you go. The pipestem of white ash
is
your
pipe
sacred. It
is
is
your
altar,
and you
backbone. Tobacco shall be your offering, and the smoke your prayers prayers,
do
rising.
it
When
you and your
families.
what you pray ask
for,
wrongly,
it
this pipe to
manner and your
in a sacred
answered. If you use
you use
harm
Use the pipe
make your
prayers will be
will
wisely.
come back on Be
careful of
because you will get exactly what you
for.”
That giant
is
the story of
how Glous’gap conquered
moose and the giant
the sacred pipe to the
eagle
and
Micmac. The
in
North America, you can
moose made
truth of the story
them
is
map of
huge gouges the fran-
in the earth. Today, they are filled
water, and people call in the
see the five
the
doing so brought
written on the face of the land. If you look at a
tic
is
up with
the Great Lakes. Farther west,
southwest corner of Minnesota,
lies
the site of the
giant eagle’s nest, where the blood of our ancestors turned to stone.
Today
it is
called Pipestone National
and Native American peoples from
come
there for stone to
pipe Glous’gap
72
*
made
make
all
Monument,
across the continent
their pipes, just like the first
for us so long ago.
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
GLOUS’GAP AND PAINTED TURTLE Wodinit atogagan Clous gapi
L in
ONG AGO,
.
.
Glous’gap lived for a time
among
our people in a large village near Grand Lake,
what
was
.
is
now
the province of
a beautiful place
New
surrounded by
Brunswick.
tall
shade
It
trees.
Every morning the
women would sweep
the ground
around their lodges with pine or spruce boughs to keep the village clean.
In the neatest
wigwam of the whole
dwelled with Mrs. Bear,
whom
village
Glous’gap
he called Nou’goum’i, or
Grandmother. Our people say that Glous’gap was sent
among
way
us to teach us the right
be sure, Mrs. Bear was just generous old
like
woman who was
need and teaching the special things they
girls
which
to live,
and
to
him. She was a wise and
always helping out people in
and younger
women
all
the
needed to know.
In those days a
man
wigwam
the village in a
in
called Painted Turtle lived across
by himself.
all
He
didn’t have a
wife of his own, but he fancied himself quite the ladies’
man.
He would
flirt
him, and quite a few
with any
women
woman who would
did
judgment, because he was such talking fellow.
No
power
women, and
to lure
their sweethearts
made
doubt about
so, in spite
look
at
of their better
handsome and smooth-
a it,
Painted Turtle had the
thus he stole girls away from
and wives away from
their
husbands and
trouble for everyone in the village.
Finally the
whole town was
and jealousy and
fear
in such
an uproar of gossip
and broken hearts that Mrs. Bear said
to Glous’gap in exasperation, “You’ve got to
about that rascally Painted Turtle! thing done because of him.
do something
Nobody can
The men
get any-
won’t go out hunting
because they’re afraid to leave their wives alone in the lage with him,
and the
plants for food or
wood
they’re afraid he’ll follow
74
*
women
won’t go out to gather
for their
them
vil-
cooking
fires
into the forest
because
and practice
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
his wiles
on them. You were sent here and
learn to live happily its
up
to
you
at
to help the people
peace with one another, and so
to put a stop to this business!”
“All right,” replied Glous’gap, “I will.”
Drawing upon into a slender
and
full lips,
woman
young woman with long shining black
soft
brown
steaming by the
fire
eyes like a doe’s.
and walked with
encampment
until she
Painted Turtle. “Hello! Here
I
hair,
Then Glous’gap-
wooden bowl of corn soup
picked up a
across the
Glous’gap turned himself
his magic,
a lightly
came
that
was
swaying gait
to the lodge of
am,” she called out in a low
musical voice. “I’ve brought you a
gift!”
Painted Turtle sat as he always did, with the entrance
of his lodge wide open so he could spy on people pass-
flap
ing by.
Of course
and he was
come
he especially had his eye out for women,
a little flustered
to his lodge of her
His
calling to him.
by
own
this lovely stranger
accord and
now
“Come tried
in,”
stood outside
and he quickly
lustful heart raged,
began to scheme how he might best have
who had
his
way with
her.
he called out, once he’d decided on one of his
and proven methods of seduction.
Smiling
shyly, her eyes
downcast, Glous’gap-woman
stepped through the door of the birchbark-covered lodge. Turtle was lounging on his bed, leaning back against a log
and carefully painting each cheek and forehead.
made
Then he
maplewood
stick
his face.
He daubed
a red dot
on
a big red dot right in the center of his
parted his hair
down
and painted the part
he turned aside and spat into the
fire.
the middle with a
red, too. Suddenly,
His
spittle
turned
into a freshwater pearl-and-shell up'kous'un, or necklace.
glous’gap and painted turtle
*
75
“Go guest,
ahead, pick
waving
up!” said Painted Turtle to his shy
it
hand nonchalantly toward the gleaming
his
more where
necklace. “There’s plenty
came from!”
that one
Glous’gap-woman knelt and gingerly gathered up the necklace from the blackened stones that ringed the
went on
Turtle leg,
admire
plucked
matching
for a
it
,
or
wampum
from the
shell.
While Glous’gap-
and held
fire
When
he spat into the
it
to the light to
third time, a
fire a
of shell earrings appeared. “Those are for you
set
“And
dear,” said Turtle casually.
me
walk with
better to give you.
“Oh
This
Turtle busied himself painting a red line around
it,
his other leg.
my
again.
fire
magically turned into an iridescent choker
spittle
made of oul'nap'skouk
woman
around one
line
and when he was done he spat into the
time the
too,
broad red
to paint a
fire.
dear,
alone in the
I
I
in the
know
woods, all
I’ll
come
have something even
I
ought to go walking
woods with any man,”
woman. She looked longingly by their beauty.
only
the secrets of the forest!”
just don’t think
them over and over
if you’ll
said Glous’gap-
at the gifts
and turned
in her slender hands, as if
“My grandmother
says that
enchanted
is
how
girls
always get into trouble.”
“Look
me!”
at
commanded
Turtle, in a voice that sug-
gested his feelings were deeply hurt. “Don’t you think I’m
handsome? Don’t you gone to
all
you think trouble?”
like the
way
I
look,
now
the trouble of painting myself just for you?
a
man
like
He shook
me would his
head
ever try to cause a
a
woman
wrong impres-
sion of him.
*
Do
sadly, as if in disbelief that
Glous’gap-woman could have gotten such
76
that I’ve
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
“Well,
Glous’gap-woman
don’t know,” said
I
hesitantly,
turning the jewelry over and over in her hands.
still
Now
it
looked as though she were thinking about taking that walk in the
woods with Painted
Turtle after
all.
That
little bit
hesitancy was just what Painted Turtle was looking
now
he began to press her harder.
woman
this beautiful strange
show you
“I’ll
“Well,
woman
guess
I
it
sorts
The
insisted, taking her
let
into the
to get
by the
of things!”
will be all right,” said
meekly, and she
wigwam and
his
all
wanted
really
and
alone.
“Oh, come on, now,” he elbow.
He
for,
of
Glous’gap-
Painted Turtle lead her out of
shadows of the woods.
couple walked on for a long way, admiring the
mocassin-flowers and the ghostly white Indian pipes and all
the different kinds of
mushrooms
that Painted Turtle
pointed out growing in the leafy mulch of the forest
At
last
clearing.
The
just as if it
tree
were
“Here we sat
them
the path they were following led
down and
a
floor.
to a small
branches arched overhead and shaded
summer
are!”
brush-shelter.
exclaimed Painted Turtle happily, as he
leaned back against the broad trunk of a
He
patted the ground next to him.
me,
my little
“Come
sit
tree.
here beside
sweetheart!” he called.
Glous’gap-woman gazed wide-eyed around the clearing and then cautiously sat herself
down
little
beside
Painted Turtle.
He
isn’t this nice,
now?” he asked. Then he pretended
slipped his
arm around
yawn, and gradually he eased himself down lying flat
and take
on
it,
his back.
a little rest,
“Come
my
dear?
on,
why
until
not just
You must be
GLOUS GAP AND PAINTED TURTLE
*
“There,
her.
to
he was
lie
back
so very tired
77
after that
long walk!” he said in a soothing voice as he
stroked her shoulder.
Glous’gap-woman obediently
He drew
Turtle.
how
beside Painted
murmuring
her close to him,
about her beauty and
down
lay
in her ear
glad he was they could be alone
together in this romantic place just meant for the two of
them. Glous’gap-woman stared up
at
him
in
wonder,
as if
she were spellbound by his sweet talk. Painted Turtle closed his eyes dreamily
— and within seconds, he was
sound asleep and snoring! Glous’gap-woman was the one casting the stronger spell, and sure enough, she had
charmed Painted Turtle
into a deep slumber.
Then Glous’gap-woman
sprang up and looked about
until she spied a rotten log in the
The
the clearing. that can
kill if a
“Oh,
lay.
my
person
is
He
was
his eyes.
still
The
The
ants,
do
that!”
mumbled
angry
all
at their
over Painted
Turtle.
“You
tick-
very drowsy and could not seem to open
ants kept crawling over him,
can’t find
show you
it.
disturbed, began to crawl
their log in even greater
“You
the would-be lover sighed,
sweetheart,” and sleepily threw his arms
Turtle’s body. “Don’t le!”
where Painted
rolled the log over to
around the log and hugged
home being
edge of
many of them.
bitten by too
Out of his dreaming, little
at the
log was swarming with red ants, the kind
Glous’gap-woman Turtle
underbrush
numbers. “Lie
out about the secrets
I
swarming out of
still!”
he ordered.
brought you here to
you keep on tickling me!” and he began
if
to
thrash about.
By
this time, the ants
ing him.
At 78
that,
*
were angry enough to begin
bit-
Painted Turtle bolted upright and discov-
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
ered he had been hugging a rotten log.
started slapping
astonishment and looked wildly about for his
at the ants in
lovely
He
young companion. There
mighty Glous’gap, restored
in the clearing stood the
own
to his
form.
“Painted Turtle,” said Glous’gap sternly, “you’ve caused trouble for this village long enough.
crawl on your belly to pay for
going to leave
all
all
From now
on, you will
your wrongdoing, and I’m
your gaudy paint showing on you, too.
those fancy red dots and streaks, everyone will for
who and what you
And sponsible
so
it
know you
are!”
was that Glous’gap transformed that
young man
By
into the painted turtle
we
see
irre-
around
our ponds and streams today. Glous’gap did what his
grandmother bade him, and made things come out Ever
after,
when our young men behold
right.
the painted turtle
crawling on his belly and showing his bright red bodypaint, they
remember
that they
must not
act
toward
women as Painted Turtle did. Instead, they resolve to cherish women as sisters and friends, as cousins and aunts, as daughters and wives and mothers.
glous’gap and painted turtle
*
79
.
THE BOY IN THE BIRCHBARK BOX Wodiriit atogagan Glous'gapi
G
LOUS’GAP upon
a
many
hunting camp
There he found wrong,
in his
a
man and
my friends?” he
travels
.
.
once happened
far in the
north woods.
his wife grieving.
asked.
“What
“Why do you weep
is
so?”
The
couple looked at each other in despair and then
turned to Glous’gap. “Our son has run away,” they told him. “He says he hates resents everything
we
us,
ask
him
his very
to do, even
go hunting!
to gather firewood or to lot in life
and despises
and deplores the way we
Glous’gap puzzled about
He
treat
when
little
good
only
him.”
this, especially
and indeed
parents,
it is
says he hates his
learned the boy was only twelve winters old. hate these
He
name!
his
when he
How could
whole
life,
he
with so
knowledge of the world?
“Where
is
your son?” Glous’gap asked. “In what direc-
tion did he set off?”
“We know
is
go,” the father sighed. “All
that he’s gone, and he’s taken a
new
arrows, the
him, and
him
didn’t see
my
canoe.
only child, and
We
we have
can’t
bow and some
mother
just
think what to do!
He
pair of mocassins his
tried so
we
made is
our
hard to love him well and
bring him up right.”
Glous’gap stayed with the heartbroken family
all
that
night to console them, but by the time the sun rose from
beneath the earth on the following morning he realized the only way to ease their pain would be to bring their son safely
home
to
them.
Stepping outside the wigwam, Glous’gap drew one of his arrows
from
bow, aimed
it
He nocked that arrow to his and let it fly. Of course it was a
his quiver.
skyward,
magic arrow, and he knew that whatever direction that
would be the way the boy had
fled.
the arrow’s unswerving arc until he
M2
•
it
took,
Glous’gap ran after
came
to the place
ON THE TRAIL OF ELDER BROTHER
where
had
it
again, once
did this
snatched
more following
many
up and shot
it
times until he began to
and shooting
it
aloft
unerring path. Glous’gap
its
Soon he was outrunning
arrow.
it,
one with the
feel at
catching
it
in midair,
forth again without once breaking his
it
His power was mounting, and he could sense the
stride.
boy’s trail
the
He
fallen.
growing warmer. By
camp of the
nightfall,
he was
far
from
sorrowful parents.
“Where’s that boy gotten
to,
answer came because the dark therefore Glous’gap asked
eh?” he said aloud. But no itself
has no voice, and
no more.
For seven days Glous’gap tracked the youngster, stopping every night to
rest.
In
that time he
all
camp
or a footprint or even a
hope.
He knew
fire. Still,
saw no sign of a
he did not give up
arrow would guide him
his
true,
and he
resolved to be patient.
Meantime, what had happened
He was
voyaging
he spied an old
far
man
down
The boy
him from
canoe
when
the bank.
you going?” the elder
called.
did not want to be pinned down, so he
answered evasively. replied.
are
runaway boy?
river in his stolen
hailing
“Tamtalin? Where
to the
“I’ve
paddled
“And you, nigsgamitj
,
my
a far distance,”
grandfather?
he
Have you
traveled far?”
“Oh,
Now,
I’ve
come
a ways,” said the old
the boy did not
kindly grandfather
who
know
it,
man.
but this was really no
stood there before him, doddering
about in his worn moccasins and smiling his brokentoothed smile. Oh, no
THE BOY
IN
—
it
was none other than the witch
THE BIRCHBARK BOX
*
83
many shadowy
Poug’tjin’skwes herself in one of her
and she was out that day
more power
to gain
to capture another victim in order
wicked
for her
“Do you have room
in
sorceries.
your canoe for an elder
me?” wheedled Poug’tjin’skwes, sounding
man you
could imagine.
direction. Besides,
guises,
“We seem
to be
two on the paddles
like
like the nicest old
going in the same
will
make
for better
time, eh?”
The boy had close to the
to
admit that was
embankment
true,
so the kindly old fellow could
climb into the kwi’den. But as soon into the canoe,
all
his
old-man
into tatters at his feet,
boy
and he pulled up
as the elder
disguise
seemed
The
away
to fall
and Poug’tjin’skwes appeared
as a slavering she-hag.
to the
and
sorceress reached out
him with her gnarled hand. She clutched
seized
stepped
the star-
youngster by the wrist and sang an incantation that
tled
caused him to shrink until he was no bigger than her
thumb. Then she caught him up and popped him into the of small birchbark box
sort
the lid
down
When boy’s left
we
maggak and fastened
call a
tight.
the
boy shrank so
abruptly, the moccasins the
mother had lovingly sewn and beaded
for
him were
standing empty, side by side on the floor of the canoe.
“Oh
ho!
I
get
skwes cackled gift!”
she
“Thank
new moccasins as she
mocked
out of
reached for the
as she slipped
you, thank you, noutjitj
,
this, too!” Poug’tjin’-
pair.
“Oh, what
a fine
them on her bony
feet.
my grandchild!” Then
snatched up the maggak flipped opened the ,
lid,
she
and
peered inside. All the terrified boy could see was one enor-