Native American Legends
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How Coyote Stole Fire
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Long ago, when man was newly come into
the world, there were days when he was the happiest creature of all. Those
were the days when spring brushed across the willow tails, or when his children
ripened with the blueberries in the sun of summer, or when the goldenrod
bloomed in the autumn haze. |
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But always the mists of autumn evenings
grew more chill, and the sun's strokes grew shorter. Then man saw winter
moving near, and he became fearful and unhappy. He was afraid for his children,
and for the grandfathers and grandmothers who carried in their heads the
sacred tales of the tribe. Many of these, young and old, would die in the
long, ice-bitter months of winter. |
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Coyote, like the rest of the People,
had no need for fire. So he seldom concerned himself with it, until one spring
day when he was passing a human village. There the women were singing a song
of mourning for the babies and the old ones who had died in the winter. Their
voices moaned like the west wind through a buffalo skull, prickling the hairs
on Coyote's neck. |
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"Feel how the sun is now warm on our
backs," one of the men was saying. "Feel how it warms the earth and makes
these stones hot to the touch. If only we could have had a small piece of
the sun in our teepees during the winter." |
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Coyote, overhearing this, felt sorry
for the men and women. He also felt that there was something he could do
to help them. He knew of a faraway mountain-top where the three Fire Beings
lived. These Beings kept fire to themselves, guarding it carefully for fear
that man might somehow acquire it and become as strong as they. Coyote saw
that he could do a good turn for man at the expense of these selfish Fire
Beings. |
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So Coyote went to the mountain of the
Fire Beings and crept to its top, to watch the way that the Beings guarded
their fire. As he came near, the Beings leaped to their feet and gazed
searchingly round their camp. Their eyes glinted like bloodstones, and their
hands were clawed like the talons of the great black vulture. |
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"What's that? What's that I hear?"
hissed one of the Beings. |
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"A thief, skulking in the bushes!"
screeched another. |
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The third looked more closely, and
saw Coyote. But he had gone to the mountain-top on all fours, so the Being
thought she saw only an ordinary coyote slinking among the
trees. |
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"It is no one, it is nothing!" she
cried, and the other two looked where she pointed and also saw only a grey
coyote. They sat down again by their fire and paid Coyote no more
attention. |
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So he watched all day and night as
the Fire Beings guarded their fire. He saw how they fed it pine cones and
dry branches from the sycamore trees. He saw how they stamped furiously on
runaway rivulets of flame that sometimes nibbled outwards on edges of dry
grass. He saw also how, at night, the Beings took turns to sit by the fire.
Two would sleep while one was on guard; and at certain times the Being by
the fire would get up and go into their teepee, and another would come out
to sit by the fire. |
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Coyote saw that the Beings were always
jealously watchful of their fire except during one part of the day. That
was in the earliest morning, when the first winds of dawn arose on the mountains.
Then the Being by the fire would hurry, shivering, into the teepee calling,
"Sister, sister, go out and watch the fire." But the next Being would always
be slow to go out for her turn, her head spinning with sleep and the thin
dreams of dawn. |
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Coyote, seeing all this, went down
the mountain and spoke to some of his friends among the People. He told them
of hairless man, fearing the cold and death of winter. And he told them of
the Fire Beings, and the warmth and brightness of the flame. They all agreed
that man should have fire, and they all promised to help Coyote's
undertaking. |
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Then Coyote sped again to the mountain-top.
Again the Fire Beings leaped up when he came close, and one cried out, "What's
that? A thief, a thief!" |
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But again the others looked closely,
and saw only a grey coyote hunting among the bushes. So they sat down again
and paid him no more attention. |
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Coyote waited through the day, and
watched as night fell and two of the Beings went off to the teepee to sleep.
He watched as they changed over at certain times all the night long, until
at last the dawn winds rose. |
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Then the Being on guard called, "Sister,
sister, get up and watch the fire." |
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And the Being whose turn it was climbed
slow and sleepy from her bed, saying, "Yes, yes, I am coming. Do not shout
so." |
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But before she could come out of the
teepee, Coyote lunged from the bushes, snatched up a glowing portion of fire,
and sprang away down the mountainside. |
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Screaming, the Fire Beings flew after
him. Swift as Coyote ran, they caught up with him, and one of them reached
out a clutching hand. Her fingers touched only the tip of the tail, but the
touch was enough to turn the hairs white, and coyote tail-tips are white
still. Coyote shouted, and flung the fire away from him. But the others of
the People had gathered at the mountain's foot, in case they were needed.
Squirrel saw the fire falling, and caught it, putting it on her back and
fleeing away through the tree-tops. The fire scorched her back so painfully
that her tail curled up and back, as squirrels' tails still do
today. |
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The Fire Beings then pursued Squirrel,
who threw the fire to Chipmunk. Chattering with fear, Chipmunk stood still
as if rooted until the Beings were almost upon her. Then, as she turned to
run, one Being clawed at her, tearing down the length of her back and leaving
three stripes that are to be seen on chipmunks' backs even today. Chipmunk
threw the fire to Frog, and the Beings turned towards him. One of the Beings
grasped his tail, but Frog gave a mighty leap and tore himself free, leaving
his tail behind in the Being's hand---which is why frogs have had no tails
ever since. |
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As the Beings came after him again,
Frog flung the fire on to Wood. And Wood swallowed it. |
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The Fire Beings gathered round, but
they did not know how to get the fire out of Wood. They promised it gifts,
sang to it and shouted at it. They twisted it and struck it and tore it with
their knives. But Wood did not give up the fire. In the end, defeated, the
Beings went back to their mountain-top and left the People
alone. |
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But Coyote knew how to get fire out
of Wood. And he went to the village of men and showed them how. He showed
them the trick of rubbing two dry sticks together, and the trick of spinning
a sharpened stick in a hole made in another piece of wood. So man was from
then on warm and safe through the killing cold of winter. |
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