The Unwritten Literature of the Hopi eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 108 pages of information about The Unwritten Literature of the Hopi.

The Unwritten Literature of the Hopi eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 108 pages of information about The Unwritten Literature of the Hopi.

“He asked her to make a Giant out of the gum.  She greased her hands and molded a big figure about a foot thick and four feet high with head and arms and legs.  Then she covered it up with a white wedding blanket, and then she take whisk-broom and she patted with the broom, in time to her singing, on this doll figure, and it began to live and grow larger.

“When she finished singing he was enormously wide and tall, and he got up and uncovered himself and he sat there and said, ’What can I do to help you?’

“Then the governor said, ’I hired the old lady to make you and make you come to life so you can do a job for me.  Now you go and make your home over here near by.’

“The governor gave him as weapons a hatchet, bow and arrow, a rabbit stick, and a big basket to carry the children away in, and a big wooden spear.

“‘Now you go over there,’ the governor said, ’and make your home.  On the fourth day you come down and catch the first child you see playing on trash piles.’

“So on the fourth day the Giant came over early before sunrise and got to Oraibi by sunrise and got up here on top of the mesa and saw two brothers playing on the trash pile.  They were facing west and he slipped up behind and tied them together and put them in his basket and carry them to his home.

“At breakfast the families missed the children and traced them to where the Giant picked them up, but saw no tracks farther.

“Every morning he comes over looking for some more children and got away with many before parents know where they went.

“This kept going on till there were very few children left and the parents were very sad.  Giant leaves no tracks, so nobody knows what to do.  At last parents decide to do something.

“The second chief decided to go to the two little War Gods, who live with their grandmother, a Spider Woman, and see if they would help them.

“So then the second chief cut two round pieces out of strong buckskin, and made two big balls and stuffed them hard and painted them with a red face, a mask like Supais.  He made a strong bow and many strong arrows and put them in a—­something like an army bag.  All this he made for the Twin War Gods, who are small but powerful and their medicine too.

“Then he took these presents and started off to the home of these two little War Gods.

“At early sunrise he arrived there and peeked down into their house, which was like a big kiva, and there were the two boys playing shinney.

“The grandmother received the man kindly and told the rough, unruly boys to stop their playing and be quiet.  But they don’t stop their playing, so she picked up a big stick and hit the boys a good lick across the legs.  Now the boys see the man and his two fine balls and sticks.  They say to each other, ‘We like to have those things!’

“After a good breakfast she asked the man, ‘What can we do for you?’

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Unwritten Literature of the Hopi from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.