Arapaho Tales I
Arapaho Tales I
Arapaho Tales I
Arapaho Tales I
Author(s): Zdenek Salzmann and Joy Salzmann
Source: Hoosier Folklore, Vol. 9, No. 3 (Jul. - Sep., 1950), pp. 80-96
Published by: Hoosier Folklore Society
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/27650020
Accessed: 01-11-2015 01:24 UTC
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/page/
info/about/policies/terms.jsp
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content
in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship.
For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.
Indiana University Press and Hoosier Folklore Society are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to
Hoosier Folklore.
http://www.jstor.org
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
ARAPAHO TALES I
By Zdenek and Joy Salzmann
changes are concerned almost entirely with grammar. The field trip
during which these tales were collected was made possible by grants from
the American Philosophical Society and the Graduate School of Indiana
Kroeber, op. cit. (in the references below, followed by number and page),
to warrant publication :
White Man and the Kingfisher does not vary appreciably from
80
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
ARAPAHO TALES 81
White Man and the Bears (alternatively White Man and the Plums)
correspond to Nih'?n?an and the Bear-Women (no. 49, pp. 101-103)
except for the conclusion, which in our version takes the following
explanatory form : The bears were not burned to death ; the smoke hurt
their eyes so that they could hardly open them. For this bears
reason,
have very small eyes in proportion to their other organs. Because they
were so mistreated at that time, bears became hostile to man.?For
another published variant of this tale, cf. H. R. op. cit., p. 48
Voth, (The
Cannibal and the Fox).
White Man and His Friend corresponds to Nih'?n?an Imitates His
Host (no. 61, p. 120).
White Man and His Mother-in-Law, for which see Nih'?n?an and His
Mother-in-Law (no. 39, pp. 75-77), has been told with considerably less
detail, undoubtedly obscenity. to avoid
The Comanche and the Kiowa corresponds to The Faithless Woman
and the Kiowa (no. 114, p. 262) ; our version is said to be a recent story
of Comanche provenience. Accordingly, the main character is a Comanche
instead of an Arapaho.
White Man and the Bird
corresponds to Nih'?ncan Loses His Eyes
(no. 17, pp. 51-52). In
version, our in order to get back his the
sight,
trickster exchanges his eyes for those of a helpful mouse. Soon, by
trickery, he wins back his own eyes.
White Man and the Elks corresponds to Nih'?n?an and the Elks (no.
28, pp. 61-62) except for the conclusion, which in our version adds the
final incident of Nih'?n?an and the Bear-Women (no. pp.
49, 101-103),
viz., spilling of remaining meat scraps into fire.
Both White Man and the Beavers and White Man and the Ducks
continue with identical accounts of a race with Coyote, who in turn tricks
White Man out of his catch. Nih'?n?an and the Beavers (no. 25, pp.
58-59) lacks the race entirely, whereas in Nih'?n?an,s Feast of Beaver
Stolen by Coyote (no. 24, pp. 57-58) and Nih'?n?an and the Dancing
Ducks (no. 26, pp. 59-60, and no. 27, pp. 60-61), is deprived
Nih'?n?an
of his meat by other trickery.
Conversely, as an example of almost complete compare
divergence,
the version of Blood-Clot-Boy in Dorsey and Kroeber, op. cit., no. 130,
pp. 298-304, with that recorded by the present editors, to appear in a
forthcoming paper.
4 The informant tells us of an interesting tradition which has
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
82 HOOSIER FOLKLORE
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
ARAPAHO TALES 83
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
84 HOOSIER FOLKLORE
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
ARAPAHO TALES 85
Found-in-Grass8
Many years ago a man and his wife lived in a lonely tepee
in the foothills. The man used to go out often to hunt for
some meat for winter. He would come home sometimes very
late at night. One time he told his wife that if he was late
coming home, should not pay any attention
she to anyone
shouting by close
where they lived and that she should not
go out. "I know the trail home even if it is dark," he said.
Time went on. One night he was very late coming home.
The woman sat up waiting for him until long past midnight
7 For another of the
Arapaho mythical explanation Pleiades, cf.
Dorsey and Kroeber, op. cit., no. 82, pp. 160-161.
For a more detailed and extended variant of the above not
references,
involving the origin of the Pleiades, cf. ibid., no. 81, pp. 153-159.
Of the four Arapaho variants of the tale printed above, two make
no reference to the Pleiades, viz., Dorsey and Kroeber, op. cit., no. 105,
pp. 238-239, and H. R. Voth, op. cit., p. 49 (The Bear Girl) ; one seems
implicitly to refer to the
Pleiades, viz., Dorsey and Kroeber, op. cit.,
no. 80, pp. 152-153; the fourth, a fragmentary version, viz., H. R. Voth,
op. cit., p. 44 (The Origin of the Pleiades), makes direct reference to the
constellation.
For a general bibliography of the North American Indian tales
explaining the origin of the Pleiades (A773), see Stith Thompson's Tales
of the North American Indians (Cambridge, Mass., 1929), pp. 291f.
8 The informant volunteered this it no name.
tale, giving Later with
the help of the elitors, he identified it as Found-in-Grass.
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
86 HOOSIER FOLKLORE
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
ARAPAHO TALES 87
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
88 HOOSIER FOLKLORE
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
ARAPAHO TALES 89
boys sat one on either side of the man and tried to untangle
his hair. While they were working, the man fell asleep and
soon was snoring. Then the boys tied his hair to the tepee
posts. Next they threw a rock into the fireplace. When it
had become red-hot, they picked it up and threw it into the
opening in the man's head and burned his brain. The heat
made his brain begin to boil. The man could not move be
cause his hair was tied to the tepee posts. This was the way
the boys killed the wicked man. When they thought that he
was dead,they cut off all his long strings of hair and took them
home, They told their father that they could use them to
make rope. The man asked his boys where the hair had come
from. When they told him, he did not believe that they had
killed the wicked man. He asked how they had done it. When
the boys had told him, he finally believed that they had really
killed the wicked man in the timber.
One day the man gave his sons another warning. He told
them not to go near the tree which stood by itself away from
all other trees. "Don't go over there, don't go near," he said.
So they played around in the brush and timber. But one boy
wanted to go close to the tree. His brother said, "No, Father
told us not to go over there." But the first boy was deter
mined to go, so they both went to see what they could see close
by the tree. There they found a lot of bones, bones from
many kinds of animals, even human bones, all lying around.
And while they were looking down at these bones, all of a
sudden the tree began to fall toward them. But the boys were
quick, and they jumped away from the place where the tree
landed. It was broken into many pieces, but it did not kill the
boys. They looked at it and said, "You wicked tree, you killed
all these people and animals. You have been wicked. When
ever a tree falls down, it will never get up again. You will lie
here until you rot away." That is what they said. When they
left, they took some of the sticks from the tree home with them
to use for firewood. They told their father that they had got
rid of the tree that had been killing so many people and ani
mals. Their father asked them how they had done it, and they
told him all that had happened.
Some time later he warned the boys of a certain place
where there were sage chickens. He told them that they must
not bother them, "for if you do, if you shoot them with your
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
90 HOOSIER FOLKLORE
arrows, you won't hit them. And if you run out of arrows,
don't pick up an arrow, don't use it a second time. Just leave
it alone. I can make new arrows for you." So they stayed
away from that place.
Next he warned his boys not to go into the timber where
the eagles' nest was. In the top of a tall tree these eagles
had a nest with little ones in it. The man told his sons not
to bother the eagles but to stay away from them. But one
boy wanted to go and see the young birds. The other boy
said, "No, Father told us not to go. We must not go." But
his brother insistedon going over to look at the nest. They
found it in the top of the tree just as their father had told
them. The boy who never listened to his father's warnings
decided to climb the tree. When he reached the nest, he throw
the young helpless birds down to the ground. Both boys
began to strike and kick them. Then one brother asked one of
the young birds, "Who are your father and mother? Where
are they?" The bird replied, "My father is always up in the
sky." "What does he do when he comes to see you? What
happens then?" asked the boy. It answered, "When my father
comes to see me, the clouds are dark; it rains, there is elec
tricity in the air, and sometimes it hails." The other boy
picked up the other young bird, kicked it and threw it around,
and asked it, "What happens when your mother comes to see
you?" "When my mother comes down to see me, there is
lightning, the winds are strong, and you can see the trees
being blown through the air." That is what the little bird
answered. "Well, call your father and mother ; let them come
down. We want to see who they are," said the two boys. So
the birds began to make a noise as if they were whistling.
The eagles heard their children calling for help. At once the
boys saw black clouds and lightning, and a strong wind came
up. They could see hills blown over and trees flying through
the air. The eagles were coming down. The older boy shot
his arrow onto a rock and it stuck there. Then he said to the
eagles, "If you can pull my arrow off this rock, you can kill
me. If you can't pull it off this rock, why, I'll kill you !" So
the first eagle shrieked as loud as the thunder, came down,
grabbed the arrow, and went up with it as far into the sky
as the buffalo neck cord arrow would stretch. It tangled
around the eagle's beak. Then it pulled back again and the
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
ARAPAHO TALES 91
Although the man had warned his sons not to bother sage
chickens, one day they decided to look for them anyway.
When they saw them, the boys began to shoot the sage chick
ens, but they ran out of arrows.
said, "Don't
One brother
pick them
up. We'll just have to quit and go home." But the
other boy wanted to go on shooting; he picked up one of his
arrows to use again. Before he took another shot with the
same arrow, the sage hens flew off. At once a whirlwind came
up, a wind strong enough to blow the boys away. They ran
for home. boy got inside the tepee, but just as the second
One
boy got of the door, he was blown
hold away.
He did not know where he was or where he was going.
The place where he landed was strange to him. Nobody was
around; there was just himself, close by the river. There the
boy lived in the brush. He would hide there at night and
sleep, with nothing to eat. When he was very hungry, he
would drink from the river and eat some of the roots which
grew on its banks. One day, when he was hiding in the brush,
some people in to make
moved camp. He heard the people
talking; he and saw many
looked out people setting up their
tepees. Some of them were coming down the river bank to
get brush. When the people had gathered enough, they all
went back except one old woman who was picking up brush
near the
boy's hiding place. He lay there quietly, watching
her. Soon the old woman saw him. "Now, that's my grand
son,10 that's my grandson! Come on, I'll take you home," she
said. So the old woman took the boy home, fed him, and cared
for him. The boy gained strength, grew larger, and could
soon take care of himself. He wanted to play with other boys,
lo the footnote.
Cf. preceding
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
92 HOOSIER FOLKLORE
although he did not look like them ;he had not been kept clean
and he was always shaggy-looking. That is why the other
boys did not like him. Whenever he tried to take part in
games with them, they chased him away. So he had to go
home and stay with his grandmother.
The boy grew more and more until at last he was almost
a young man. One day the chief wanted a good red fox fur.
He told the young men of the camp to set their traps and
announced that he would give his older daughter in marriage
to whoever brought him the best fur. The man who brought
the next fur was
best to win his younger daughter. So that
night all the young men went out and set their traps. The
boy wanted to try too. His grandmother told him, "You are
too ugly; you must not think of such things. All the good
looking young men, they are the ones to try. Don't talk any
more about it." But when he kept begging his grandmother,
she finally took him out and helped him set his trap. The
next morning the boy got up very early, as his grandmother
had told him to do. Just before he reached his trap, he saw a
crow flying away from it.11 In the trap he found a red fox.
He picked it up and took it home to show to his grandmother.
Even though the fur was not very shiny, the boy wanted to
take it to the chief. Just then it was announced that the crow
had brought a fine fur which pleased the chief very much.
When he heard this, the boy sent his grandmother over to see
the fox. "Go over there and look
at that fox," he told her.
"Pretend you like it, and while
you examine it, pull out a few
hairs and bring The old woman
them to me." went over and
looked at the fox. While she was examining it, she pulled out
a few hairs and carried them back to her grandson. He took
some of the hair and put it on the fox he had caught. While
he was doing this, the fur changed completely. Suddenly it
was sparkling and shining. The boy told his grandmother to
11When asked about the of the crow's visit to the
significance trap,
the informant pointed out that seeing the crow fly away awoke the
boy's suspicion that the bird was guilty of some trickery. The informant
went on to explain that the crow was always first
the one up, and when
it had inspected its own trap that morning, the bird had found a poor
fur; however, in the boy's trap there was a beautiful fur, and imme
diately the crow exchanged its fur for the better one. At this point, the
boy came along and the bird flew off. The informant insisted that this
amplification wTas not an integral part of the tale.
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
ARAPAHO TALES 93
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
94 HOOSIER FOLKLORE
ground, head up. Because of the respect in which the spear was held., it
was never laid on the ground. Moreover, its standing position reminded
the man to whom it was entrusted that he "should be always on his feet,
on his way." The two black-tipped feathers of a white eagle attached to
the shaft about one third of the distance from the spearhead were to give
eagle power to the spear, and the red fox fur attached about one third
of the distance from the opposite end was to give it the cleverness and
swiftness of the fox.
is For and nos. 139
Arapaho variants, cf. Dorsey Kroeber, op. cit.,
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
ARAPAHO TALES 95
143, pp. 341-388, and H. R. Voth, op. cit., p. 43 (The Boy That Was
Carried Off by the Wind).
For an incomplete version in the Arapaho language, with translation
and linguistic notes, cf. A. L. Koeber, Arapaho Dialects (University of
California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology, Vol. 12,
Berkeley, 1916), pp. 127ff.
See also Thompson, op. cit., comparative notes for the tale Lodge
Boy and Thrown-Away, pp. 319ff.
is This tale was volunteered the informant under the above title.
by
17 Nih???9oo also and and are the
(cf. Nih'?n?an Nihansan) Coyote
main tricksters of Arapaho tales. Whenever both of them appear in a
story, Nih???9oo as a rule is deceived by the Coyote, who deprives him
of his catch. Thus, Nih???Goo is characterized both by his trickery and
his stupidity. Though the word nih???6oo is used in Arapaho for both
white man and spider, the trickster is always described as being entirely
human. The connection between the two meanings, white man and spider,
has neverbeen satisfactorily explained,Kroeber, and
op. cit.,
cf. Dorsey
footnote 3, pp. 6f. One possible etymology seems to have been overlooked:
the word nenih???xu? tight, small hole connotes to older Arapaho speak
ers both the idea of the white men's dwellings, which have very small
doors in proportion to their overall size, and the idea of the small dens
attached to the webs of certain spiders.
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
96 HOOSIER FOLKLORE
mine only when I really have to. Be sure not to use it for
fun. Nih'??thoo said, "All right, I will do whatever you tell
me." Then the man said, "Come here and place your foot on
this log. I will sharpen your leg." As Nih'??thoo was placing
his foot log, he saw the man's
on the big knife. He became
frightened, and when the man was just about to chop off his
foot, Nih'??thoo cried, "Wait! I have to straighten my foot a
little bit." When the man held the knife ready a second time,
Nih'??thoo again cried "Wait!" but the man did not wait and
chopped off Nih'??thoo's foot. Then he sharpened the stump.
When he finished, the man said again, "Now you can go, but
don't use this power unless you are hungry and have to get
your meat this way. Don't use it more than four18 times."
"All right," said Nih'??thoo, and he left. He had not gone
far when he saw a herd of buffalo grazing. He could hardly
wait to try his sharpened leg. He took a few long steps as he
had seen the man do, and then jumped, saying, "I want the
big fat one !" He killed the buffalo he wanted just as the other
man had. He felt very happy about it. Then he left, without
touching the buffalo meat. Every time he came to buffalo, he
would jump and kill one. When he jumped for the fifth buf
falo, things seemed to go as well as before and he hit the fat
test buffalo of the herd. His sharp leg went through the ani
mal's shoulder, but when the buffalo fell down, Nih'??thoo's
foot was suddenly attached to his leg again and he could not
get loose from the buffalo. But this time the animal was not
killed. It dragged Nih'??thoo through the brush, and soon he
was all torn and scratched. Whenever he tried to get loose,
the buffalo kicked him. Only when he was half dead could he
free himself,19
p. 257, and no. 109, p. 258. For a general bibliography of this motif, see
This content downloaded from 132.239.1.230 on Sun, 01 Nov 2015 01:24:30 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions