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RedPath Legends : Coyote, the Hawk and the Condor - Yokuts
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From: MSN NicknameWitchway_Pawnee  (Original Message)Sent: 8/25/2007 10:28 PM
There was a woman whom no one was able to marry, except finally Coyote.
He overcame her. She was wachwach, a handsome species of hawk. She
lived alone. The wolf and Coyote and their families lived in one place with
other people. Many men went out to hunt deer but never found any. The
wild cat and the weasel and others went. The magpie was "beniti." He
could see from inside his house and know everything. He saw that the
hawk-woman had supernatural power. She was able to kill a deer and
immediately eat it entirely, leaving only the skin. Then the wolf and Coyote
found the woman. She gave them an abundance of acorn mush. She also cooked
dried deer meat for them and gave it to them to take home. She said to
them: "Tell no one, but when you want more for your children, come and
get it." The wolf and Coyote arrived at night. Their poor little
children had to eat the meat they brought slowly, so that no one would hear
them. Nevertheless the magpie knew it. Then the people also could smell
the meat. Knowing that the two brothers had meat, they watched at
night. Then they saw them return and the old woman get up, take the meat.
cook it, and all of them eat. Then the watchers reported to the others:
"They are killing deer but give none of the meat away." The eagle was
the chief. The dove was his messenger (winatum). Thinking he would ask
advice of the magpie, the eagle sent the dove to him. The magpie only
laughed at the messenger. "Yes, Coyote and the wolf have found a
supernatural woman. She lives beyond this hill. She has more dried meat than she
can use. She keeps the deer inside the hill under ground. That is where
she gets the meat." Then all the people went to that place, to the
woman, so that it became necessary for her to give them meat. When Coyote
and the wolf arrived there in the evening, they found all the people
there already. The weasel, the hawk called wakhwukh, and others had
dressed themselves finely in order to marry her, but she would not have it.
Finally all of them said: "Let us go home." They went, but Coyote lay
there, apparently sick with fever and chills, and unable to walk. The
woman said: "You go too." Coyote told her: "I am sick. I cannot. Perhaps
later on I will be able." Then the woman made a fire inside the house.
Coyote thought how he might enter it. He, too, had supernatural power.
Then he wanted the wind to blow the house to pieces. He said: "Pu!" and
a wind storm came. It began to tear the thatching from the house. The
woman ran about trying to mend it but could not. Then Coyote said: "Give
me the binding and I will tie it." She did not like to touch him, but
to save her house she handed it to him. Now it was dark and rained.
Coyote said: "I cannot sleep here. Let me sleep inside in the corner by the
door." But she would not let him. He said: "I will die. If you wish me
to freeze to death let me lie here." Then she allowed him to come in,
and he lay near the door, shivering. She knew what he wanted. He was
thinking: "I want to sleep with her." Then she said: "No, you cannot. You
are no good." Coyote laughed. "How does she know what I think?" he
thought. "I heard it," she said. Coyote lay there and looked over towards
her. "What do you want now?" she asked. Then Coyote began to think of
sexual intercourse with her. She did not like that. She was stronger than
he and overcame him. He could not do anything to her. He went to sleep
where he lay. Then at last the woman began to think of him. At once
Coyote knew it in his sleep. He woke up and said: "You want mine! I have a
good one!" She too was desirous now and let him lie with her. But
though she allowed him to embrace her she would not let him come nearer. She
wanted once more to try to overcome him. She went out as if to urinate,
took a rattles snake, put it into herself, and returned. Then she
spread herself and invited him. He knew what she had done. Also going out to
urinate, he by his supernatural power obtained a stick of hard wood
(takha) from the cast. Putting it on himself, he returned to the woman. He
approached the stick, the rattlesnake bit it, lost its teeth, and was
harmless. Coyote said: "Ah! Now throw yours away and I will throw mine."
She did so and he married her.

Coyote had one son from this woman, wech, the condor, who was to become
a great gambler. At night they put the baby into water. After three
days he could walk. Soon he was able to gamble. Then he was a man. Coyote
was rich, constantly making beads from bone and other materials, and
encouraged his son to gamble. Then the boy went north. Then he saw a
large owl, hihina, and wishing to kill him, aimed at him. The owl, who was
a doctor, was angry and flew up into a hollow tree. There he began to
sing:

Hu hu hu 1 witcailac 2 min 3 put-onun 4

Hu hu hu 1, condor becomes 2 your 3 son 4.

As he sang this, the young man who had been so handsome began to have
feathers all over his body. His female relatives who were with him tried
to hold him, but they could not, and he turned into a condor. They said
to Coyote: "Kill the owl before he changes him completely!" But Coyote
only cried and did nothing. Now the young man Was entirely a condor. He
shook himself, rose, and flew off. The women followed, but he flew away
from them. Coyote returned. His wife knew what had happened. Then she
took a rattlesnake once more. This time he did not know it, was bitten,
and died.

Now the condor lived above and came down to earth to kill people for
food. He thought of his mother, went to her, and brought her up with him.
He tried to make her, too, eat people, but she would not do so. He
brought two little boys and a little girl. These he kept as pets. He called
them his dogs. As he was about to go off again he told his mother:
"Feed them well. When I return I will eat them." When he was gone the woman
said to the children: ''He will kill us all. He has nearly exterminated
the people now. When he has finished them he will go hither up in the
sky. Then he will come down and eat us. When he comes back you must
shoot him." She gave the two boys bows and arrows. Then the condor came
back from the earth below and went to drink. He drank half a day. The two
boys shot at him, one from each side. For half a day they shot as fast
as they could, beginning as soon as he started to drink. The little
girl kept dragging the arrows back to them and they shot them again and
again. The condor never gave notice, but continued to drink. Now the half
day was nearly over. The woman had made a hole. She put the children
in, went in herself, and covered the hole. Then the condor stopped
drinking. Now he began to feel something. Leaving the dead bodies he had
brought with him, he started upward. His mother said: "If he flies
straight, he will reach the place above, and it will be the end of us. But if
he flies to the side and zigzags and falls, he will be killed." He flew
straight up. He was already nearly out of sight. Then suddenly he shot
to one side, zigzagged, dropped, struck, and was dead. They burned him.
Then his eyes burst and flew out and were lost in the brush. If they
had been able to find the eyes and put them back in the fire there would
have been no condors in the world.

Then the woman and the little girl went down from the sky on a rope of
down feathers, going through the hole in the sky through which the
condor used to pass. The two boys went southward in the sky until they came
to where the sky and the earth meet. There they descended to the earth.
Then they came to people without mouths, who neither talked nor ate.
They killed deer, roasted them, smelled of the meat, and threw it
out-doors. In the same way they only smelled of their acorn mush. The two boys
came to them, entered the house, took hold of the meat that was
cooking, and began to eat. The people there made a protesting gesture,
meaning. "Do not. It will come out from you," again indicating by a gesture.
Neverthless {sic} the boys ate. Then they asked the chief: "Have you a
tongue inside?" He shook his head. "Have you teeth?" Again he shook his
head. Then they offered to try to cut open a mouth for one of them so
that he would be like themselves and could eat. It was agreed and the
two boys took obsidian and cut a mouth for one of those people. Soon the
man could eat and talk. Then he said:

T-ipînii 1 panîii 2 tcicîii 3 nah'èii 4 lukînii 5 bidîkii 6.

Supernatural-ones 1 arrived 2, cut 3, ate 4, belly filled 5, defecated
6,

He spoke thus because he could not talk yet correctly. If he had spoken
right he would have said:

T-ipni panac tcicîni nah'ac lokònoc

Then this man cut mouths for others, and they cut still others, mid so
they did to each other until all could eat and talk. The two boys
returned home.


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