Myth Creation
In the creation myths, though a number of variants occur, many of them tell that the world was formed of mud brought to the surface by diving animals or birds, the duck, loon, otter, muskrat, and turtle, usually being among the wild creatures sent down by various transformers. Bible stories became a part of American Indian legends.
The Rip Van Winkle theme was popular in various Indian legends long before it was introduced by Washington Irving in 1819. Compared to some of the Indian “sleeps;’ Rip’s was only a cat-nap.
Transformers, tricksters, and culture heroes are frequently the protagonists of Indian legends. These strange beings, endowed with even stranger powers, were charlatans, cheats, mischief-makers, mountebanks, and wonder-workers, motivated by greed, lust, and vainglory, to whom altruism was unknown. Most of their services to the Indians were performed unintentionally, merely to gratify their whims or feed their intense egos. Their adventures and misadventures provide tribal folklore with a comic element.
All of the tricksters possessed, to a certain degree, wit that was not wisdom and an exaggerated and distorted sense of humor. Few possessed real wit and insight. Their characters varied so, noble and ignoble traits mingling, that in some trickster tales, culture heroes and tricksters merge. Some had a dual nature, human and animal, the animal predominating and always ready to come to the surface, to the misfortune of anyone or anything they encountered. Manabozho, transformer and trickster of the Central Woodland groups, and Raven, of the Northwest Coast, were outstanding examples.
In considering these Indian makers of magic and mischief, let us remember that Europe, too, had its share of legendary male and female tricksters, of whom Morgan Le Fay, King Arthur’s fairy half-sister, and the wizard Merlin are good examples. Women transformers often appear in Indian legends, and their treachery and tricks equal or surpass those of their English prototype. Wolf Woman, of the Pawnee, and Deer Woman, of the Teton, in the guise of beautiful maidens, seduced many young warriors, who died soon after.
Since the trickster and transformer Manabozho was known to the Iroquois, Ojibwa, Menomini, Ottawa, and Fox, among other tribes, by different names, the one given him throughout the legends in this book has been standardized. As a transformer, he was among the busiest. A glance at his “family tree,’ as told in Indian legends, is interesting: His grandmother was a daughter of the moon; her daughter was ravaged by the West Wind, and while dying gave birth to a flint (which the Menomini blame for her death), a wolf cub, and Manabozho, who was to become a scourge to both man and beast.
Raven too was known by a number of names, some of them unprintable.
The Tsirnshian, of the North Pacific Coast, called him Txam’sem (pronounced Tchemsem) * and also Giant. Raven and the term “Mocker;’ often used to describe him, are synonymous.
Old Man, in many Blackfoot legends and others, was a powerful transformer and trickster who usually practiced his magic at the expense of humans and animals alike. He set a record as a transformer by becoming an animal (a wolf) only once, though like all other transformers he was adept at disguises.
The twin gods of the Zuni, Withio of the Cheyenne, animal tricksters such as Coyote of the Southwest, Rabbit, and other, lesser tricksters, were, like their confreres, a combination of boastfulness, stupidity, and wisdom of a sort.
In their better moments, transformers often taught the tribes arts and crafts and hunting skills, which brings us to the noblest transformer of them all, Glooscap, hero-god of the Northeast Woodland groups, such as Micmac, Abenaki, Penobscot, and Passamaquoddy. Some Glooscap tales smack of old Norse legends. Glooscap, genial giant, magician, transformer, lover of peace, and consistent doer-of-good, was credited with knowing and teaching every art needful to the North American Indians. He had a superb sense of humor but never used it to injure anyone or anything.
It is well to turn from transformers and tricksters, who lived only in the vivid imaginations of the Indian storytellers and their avid listeners, to real legendary figures.
Hiawatha? a great and modest chief of the Onondaga? was forced by them to go on an almost impossible mission to the Mohawk? who later adopted him. Called Hi-ant-wat-ha by the Iroquois? he was also known as “He Who Clears Rivers,’ among other titles? though that of Teacher best fits the man and his works. His achievements? recorded in history? were factual? epic? and legendary.
Hiawatha was a great statesman and? though he has become a legendary figure? should not be confused with tricksters such as Manabozho. Hiawatha achieved psychologically what legend credits him with doing by magic powers. Modern Iroquoian storytellers explain that his great “white stone canoe” was really made of white birch? and the reason for the “magic” emptying of the wampum-lined lake? told in “Hiawatha and the Iroquois Wampum,’ was the breaking of a beaver dam. When the beavers repaired the dam? the lake filled again. Given proper understanding? legend and logic can? at times? be synonymous.
After five years of effort? Hiawatha accomplished his mission when? around 1452? * he and Deganawida? a Huron later adopted by the Mohawk? founded the mighty Confederacy of the Iroquois? which began as the Five Nations. These became the Six Nations in 1722 with the admission of the Tuscarora? driven from the South by the whites. It took over a hundred years to build and weld the invincible Confederacy? one of the greatest po litical organizations ever achieved. The democratic laws on which the Great Peace was founded merit careful study, since the unprecedented handiwork of its two founders proved so outstanding that it was greatly admired by Benjamin Franklin and other erudite American colonists who were so much impressed and influenced by it that they used it as a basis for the Constitution of the United States of America.
The object of the League was to assure peace, prosperity, power, and equality for all its members. The Iroquois Confederacy was so powerful and its social order and system of government so far advanced in theory and practice from any that Europeans had known, that it became a magnet to the officially appointed ambassadors from the courts of the most enlightened European nations.
After an uninterrupted reign of over three centuries, the League of the Six Nations ceremoniously extinguished its council fire on January 19, 1777. It has recently, however, been rekindled, and will be kept burning as in the days of legend.
Another historical figure is the Pima chief, Morning Green, of Cas a Grande, in “How Turquoises Were Obtained,’ and “Women Enticed by Magic Song:’ Renowned in fact and fiction, he was regarded by the Pima as an historic personage and worker of miracles.
Most American Indian tribes had firm beliefs and strong taboos regarding certain legends. Some could be told only at certain seasons and special times, as when the moon was round, or when the forest was covered with the dark blanket of night, for fear that the telling would anger powerful spirits or call up ghosts. However, the readers who hold American Indian Legends in their hands are immune from even the most powerful spells and taboos. As they open this book, the Teller of Tales stands before them and begins, “When I was a boy, the old men told me…
European motifs such as “Pandora’s Box” and others were hit upon by Indian storytellers long before European tales reached the New World. After the arrival of the white man, more than fifty European legends, folk tales, and fairy tales were added to the Indian repertoire of legends; some were told in their entirety, and portions of others were woven into the Indian tales.
Most tribal myths and legends can be divided into specific categories, such as sacred and creation myths, historical legends, traditions, and local legends. In these folk tales of so long ago, legends, myths, traditions, and folk tales have often merged and become almost inseparable. There is little use in trying to differentiate between myth, legend, and tradition, or to delve into the origins, since little or no proof can be offered to substantiate the majority of them, though in some cases legends have been supported by archaeological research. All in all, the records of the myths and legends of the North American Indians are perhaps the most authentic in existence of those of any primitive peoples.