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It may be worth while to raise the question apropos of
this nursery tale, does the peasant folk-lore of modern
Europe really still display episodes of nature-myth, not as

1 J. and W. Grimm, ' Kinder und Hausmarchen,' vol. I. pp. 26, 140 ; vol.iii.
p. 15. [See ref. to these two stories, ' Early Hist, of M.' ist ed. (1865) p. 338.]
I find that Sir G.W.Cox, 'Mythology' (1870), vol. i. p. 358, had noticed the
Wolf and Seven Kids as a myth of the days of the week (Note to 2nd ed.).
For mentions of the wolf of darkness, see Hanusch, p. 192 ; Edda, ' Gylfa-
ginning,' 12 ; Grimm, ' D. M.' pp. 224, 668. With the episode of the stones
substituted compare the myth of Zeus and Kronos. For various other stories
belonging to the group of the Man swallowed by the Monster, see Lucian,
Historiae Verse I. ; Hardy, ' Manual of Buddhism,' p. 501 ; Lane, ' Thousand
and One Nights,' vol. iii. p. 104 ; Halliwell, ' Pop. Rhymes,' p. 98 ; ' Nursery
Rhymes,' p. 48 ; ' Early Hist, of Mankind,' p. 337.

342 MYTHOLOGY.

mere broken-down and senseless fragments, but in full shape
and significance ? In answer it will be enough to quote the
story of Vasilissa the Beautiful, brought forward by Mr. W.;
Ralston in one of his lectures on Russian Folk-lore. Vasilissa's!
stepmother and two sisters, plotting against her life, send
her to get a light at the house of Baba Yaga, the witch, and I
her journey contains the following history of the Day, told in
truest mythic fashion. Vasilissa goes and wanders, wanders
in the forest. She goes, and she shudders. Suddenly before
her bounds a rider, he himself white, and clad in white, the
horse under him white, and the trappings white. And day
began to dawn. She goes farther, when a second rider bounds
forth, himself red, clad in red, and on a red horse. The sun;
began to rise. She goes on all day, and towards evening
arrives at the witch's house. Suddenly there comes again a
rider, himself black, clad all in black, and on a black horse ;
he bounded to the gates of the Baba Yaga and disappeared
as if he had sunk through the earth. Night fell. After this,
when Vasilissa asks the witch, who was the white rider, she
answers, ' That is my clear Day ; ' who was the red rider,
' That is my red Sun ; ' who was the black rider, ' That is
my black Night ; they are all my trusty friends.' Now,
considering that the story of Little Red Ridinghood belongs
to the same class of folk-lore tales as this story of Vasilissa
the Beautiful, we need not be afraid to seek in the one for
traces of the same archaic type of nature-myth which the
other not only keeps up, but keeps up with the fullest
consciousness of meaning.

The development of nature-myth into heroic legend seems
to have taken place among the barbaric tribes of the South
Sea Islands and North America much as it took place among
the ancestors of the classic nations of the Old World. We
are not to expect accurate consistency or proper sequence of
episodes in the heroic cycles, but to judge from the charac-
teristics of the episodes themselves as to the ideas which
suggested them. As regards the less cultured races, a
glance at two legendary cycles, one from Polynesia and the

DESCENT INTO UNDER-WORLD. 343

other from North America, will serve to give an idea of the
varieties of treatment of phases of sun-myth. The New
Zealand myth of Maui, mixed as it may be with other
fancies, is in its most striking features the story of Day and
Night. The story of the Sun's birth from the ocean is thus
told. There were five brothers, all called Maui, and it was
the youngest Maui who had been thrown into the sea by
Taranga his mother, and rescued by his ancestor Tama-
nui-ki-te-Rangi, Great-Man-in-Heaven, who took him to his
house, and hung him in the roof. Then is given in fanciful
personality the tale of the vanishing of Night at dawn. One
night, when Taranga came home, she found little Maui with
his brothers, and when she knew her last-born, the child of
her old age, she took him to sleep with her, as she had been
used to take the other Mauis his brothers, before they were
grown up. But the little Maui grew vexed and suspicious,
when he found that every morning his mother rose at dawn
and disappeared from the house in a moment, not to return
till nightfall. So one night he crept out and stopped every
crevice in the wooden window and the doorway, that the day
might not shine into the house ; then broke the faint light
of early dawn, and then the sun rose and mounted into the
heavens, but Taranga slept on, for she knew not it was broad
day outside. At last she sprang up, pulled out the stopping
of the chinks, and fled in dismay. Then Maui saw her
plunge into a hole in the ground and disappear, and thus he
found the deep cavern by which his mother went down below
the earth as each night departed. After this, follows the
episode of Maui's visit to his ancestress Muri-ranga-whenua,
at that western Land's End where Maori souls descend into
the subterranean region of the dead. She sniffs as he comes
towards her, and distends herself to devour him, but when
she has sniffed round from south by east to north, she smells
his coming by the western breeze, and so knows that he is
a descendant of hers. He asks for her wondrous jawbone,
she gives it to him, and it is his weapon in his next exploit
when he catches the sun, Tama-nui-te-Ra, Great-Man-Sun,

344 MYTHOLOGY.

in the noose, and wounds him and makes him go slowly.
With a fishhook pointed with the miraculous jawbone, and
smeared with his own blood for bait, Maui next performs his
most famous feat of fishing up New Zealand, still called Te-
Ika-a-Maui, the fish of Maui. To understand this, we must
compare the various versions of the story in these and other
Pacific Islands, which show that it is a general myth of the
rising of dry land from beneath the ocean. It is said
elsewhere that it was Maui's grandfather, Rangi-Whenua,
Heaven-Earth, who gave the jawbone. More distinctly, it
is also said that Maui had two sons, whom he slew when
young to take their jawbones ; now these two sons must be
the Morning and Evening, for Maui made the morning and
evening stars from an eye of each ; and it was with the jaw-
bone of the eldest that he drew up the land from the deep.
It is related that when Maui pulled up his fish, he found it
was land, on which were houses, and stages on which to
put food, and dogs barking, and fires burning, and people
working. It appears, moreover, that the submarine region
out of which the land was lifted was the under-world of
Night, for Maui's hook had caught the gable of the house
of Hine-nui-te-po, Great-Daughter-of -Night, and when the
land came up her house was on it, and she was standing
near. Another Maori legend tells how Maui takes fire in
his hands, it burns him, and he springs with it into the sea :
' When he sank in the waters, the sun for the first time
set, and darkness covered the earth. When he found that
all was night, he immediately pursued the sun, and brought
him back in the morning.' When Maui carried or flung the
fire into the sea, he set a volcano burning. It is told, again,
that when Maui had put out all fires on earth, his mother
sent him to get new fire from her ancestress Mahuika. The
Tongans, in their version of the myth, relate how the
youngest Maui discovers the cavern that. leads to Bulotu,
the west-land of the dead, and how his father, another
Maui, sends him to the yet older Maui who sits by his great
fire ; the two wrestle, and Maui brings away fire for men,

DESCENT INTO UNDER-WORLD. 345

leaving the old earthquake-god lying crippled below. The
legendary group thus dramatizes the birth of the sun from
the ocean and the departure of the night, the extinction of
the light at sunset and its return at dawn, and the descent
of the sun to the western Hades, the under-world of night
and death, which is incidentally identified with the region
of subterranean fire and earthquake. Here, indeed, the
characteristics of true nature-myth are not indistinctly
marked, and Maui's death by his ancestress the Night fitly
ends his solar career. 1

It is a sunset-story, very differently conceived, that
begins the beautiful North American Indian myth of the
Red Swan. The story belongs to the Algonquin race.
The hunter Ojibwa had just killed a bear and begun to
skin him, when suddenly something red tinged all the air
around. Reaching the shore of a lake, the Indian saw it
was a beautiful red swan, whose plumage glittered in the
sun. In vain the hunter shot his shafts, for the bird
floated unharmed and unheeding, but at last he remem-
bered three magic arrows at home, which had been his
father's. The first and second arrow flew near and
nearer, the third struck the swan, and flapping its wings,
it flew off slowly towards the sinking of the sun. With
full sense of the poetic solar meaning of this episode
Longfellow has adapted it as a sunset picture, in one of his
Indian poems :

' Can it be the sun descending
O'er the level plain of water ?
Or the Red Swan floating, flying,
Wounded by the magic arrow,

1 Grey, ' Polyn. Myth.' p. 16, &c., see 144 ; Jas. White, ' Ancient History
of the Maori,' vol. ii. pp. 76, 115. Other details in Schirren, 'Wandersagen
der Neuseelander,' pp. 32-7, 143-51 ; R. Taylor, ' New Zealand,' p. 124, &c. ;
compare 116, 141, &c., and volcano-myth, p. 248; Yate, 'New Zealand,'
p. 142; Polack, 'M. and C. of New Z.' vol. i. p. 1558. S. Farmer, 'Tonga Is.'
p. 134. See also Turner, 'Polynesia,' pp. 252, 527 (Samoan version). In
comparing the group of Maui-legends it is to be observed that New Zealand
Mahuika and Maui-Tikitiki correspond to Tongan Mafuike and Kijikiji,
Samoan Mafuie and Tiitii.

346 ' MYTHOLOGY.

Staining all the waves with crimson,
With the crimson of its life-blood,
Filling all the air with splendour,
With the splendour of its plumage ? '

The story goes on to tell how the hunter speeds westward
in pursuit of the Red Swan. At lodges where he rests,
they tell him she has often passed there, but those who
followed her have never returned. She is the daughter of
an old magician who has lost his scalp, which Ojibwa
succeeds in recovering for him and puts back on his head,
and the old man rises from the earth, no longer aged and
decrepit, but splendid in youthful glory. Ojibwa departs,
and the magician calls forth the beautiful maiden, now not
his daughter but his sister, and gives her to his victorious
friend. It was in after days, when Ojibwa had gone home
with his bride, that he travelled forth, and coming to an
opening in the earth, descended and came to the abode of
departed spirits ; there he could behold the bright western
region of the good, and the dark cloud of wickedness. But
the spirits told him that his brethren at home were quarrel-
ling for the possession of his wife, and at last, after long
wandering, this Red Indian Odysseus returned to his
mourning constant Penelope, laid the magic arrows to his
bow, and stretched the wicked suitors dead at his feet. 1
Thus savage legends from Polynesia and America, possibly
indeed shaped under European influence, agree with the
theory* that Odysseus visiting the Elysian fields, or Orpheus
descending to the land of Hades to bring back the ' wide-
shining ' Eurydike", are but the Sun himself descending to,
and ascending from, the world below.
Where Night and Hades take personal shape in myth,

1 Schoolcraft, ' Algic Res.' vol. ii. pp. 1-33. The three arrows recur in
Manabozho's slaying the Shining Manitu, vol. i. p. 153. See the remarkably
corresponding three magic arrows in Orvar Odd's Saga ; Nilsson, ' Stone Age,'
p. 197. The Red-Swan myth of sunset is introduced in George Eliot's
' Spanish Gypsy,' p. 63 ; Longfellow, ' Hiawatha,' xii.

See Kuhn's ' Zeitschrift,' 1860, vol. ix. p. 212; Max Muller, ' Chips,'
vol. ii. p. 127 ; Cox, ' Mythology,' vol. i. p. 256, vol. ii. p. 239.

GATES OF SUNSET AND SUNRISE. 347

we may expect to find conceptions like that simply shown
in a Sanskrit word for evening, ' rajanirnukha,' i.e.,
' mouth of night.' Thus the Scandinavians told of Hel
the death-goddess, with mouth gaping like the mouth of
Fenrir her brother, the moon-devouring wolf ; and an old
German poem describes Hell's abyss yawning from heaven
to earth :

* der was der Hellen gelich
diu daz abgrunde
begenit mit ir munde
unde den himel zuo der erden.' 1

The sculptures on cathedrals still display for the terror of
the wicked the awful jaws of Death, the mouth of Hell
wide yawning to swallow its victims. Again, where barbaric
cosmology accepts the doctrine of a firmament arching
above the earth, and of an under world whither the sun
descends when he sets and man when he dies, here the
conception of gates or portals, whether really or metaphori-
cally meant, has its place. Such is the great gate which
the Gold Coast negro describes the Heaven as opening in
the morning for the Sun; such were the ancient Greek's
gates of Hades, and the ancient Jew's gates of Sheol.
There are three mythic descriptions connected with these
ideas found among the Karens, the Algonquins, and the
Aztecs, which are deserving of special notice. The Karens
of Burma, a race among whom ideas are in great measure
borrowed from the more cultured Buddhists they have
been in contact with, have precedence here for the dis-
tinctness of their statement. They say that in the west
there are two massive strata of rocks which are con-
tinually opening and shutting, and between these strata
the sun descends at sunset, but how the upper stratum
is supported, no one can describe. The idea comes well
into view in the description of a Bghai festival, where
sacrificed fowls are thus addressed, ' The seven heavens,
thou ascendest to the top ; the seven earths, thou de-

1 Grimm, ' D. M.' pp. 291, 767.

348 MYTHOLOGY.

scendest to the bottom. Thou arrivest at Khu-the ; thou
goest unto Tha-ma [i.e., Yama, the Judge of the Dead '
in Hades.] Thou goest through the crevices of rocks,
though goest through the crevices of precipices. At the
opening and shutting of the western gates of rock, thou
goest in between ; thou goest below the earth where the
Sun travels, I employ thee, I exhort thee. I make thee
a messenger, I make thee an angel, &C.' 1 Passing from
Burma to the region of the North American lakes, we find
a corresponding description in the Ottawa tale of losco,
already quoted here for its clearly marked personifica-
tion of Sun and Moon. This legend, though modern
in some of its description of the Europeans, their ships,
and their far-off land across the sea, is evidently
founded on a myth of Day and Night. losco seems to
be loskeha, the White One, whose contest with his brother
Tawiscara, the Dark One, is an early and most genuine
Huron nature-myth of Day and Night. losco and his
friends travel for years eastward and eastward to reach
the sun, and come at last to the dwelling of Manabozho
near the edge of the world, and then, a little beyond,
to the chasm to be passed on the way to the land of the
Sun and Moon. They began to hear the sound of the
beating sky, and it seemed near at hand, but they had far
to travel before they reached the place. When the sky
came down, its pressure would force gusts of wind from the
opening, so strong that the travellers could hardly keep
their feet, and the sun passed but a short distance
above their heads, The sky would come down with
violence, but it would rise slowly and gradually. losco and
one of his friends stood near the edge, and with a great
effort leapt through and gained a foothold on the other
side ; but the other two were fearful and undecided, and

1 Mason, ' Karens,' in ' Journ. As. Soc. Bengal,' 1865, part ii. pp. 233-4.
Prof. Liebrecht, in his notice of the ist ed. of the present work, In ' Gott. Gel.
Anz.' 1872, p. 1290, refers to a Burmese legend in Bastian, O. A. vol. ii.
p. 515, and a Mongol legend, Gesser Chan, book iv.

GATES OF SUNSET AND SUNRISE. 349

when their companions called to them through the dark-
ness, 'Leap! leap! the sky is on its way down,' they
looked up and saw it descending, but paralyzed by fear
they sprang so feebly that they only reached the other
side with their hands, and the sky at the same moment
striking violently on the earth with a terrible sound,
forced them into the dreadful black abyss. 1 Lastly, in the
funeral ritual of the Aztecs there is found a like description
of the first peril that the shade, had to encounter on the
road leading to that subterranean Land of the Dead, which
the sun lights when it is night on earth. Giving the
corpse the first of the passports that were to carry him
safe to his journey's end, the survivors said to him, ' With
these you will pass between the two mountains that smite
one against the other.' 2 On the suggestion of this group
of solar conceptions and that of Maui's death, we may
perhaps explain as derived from a broken-down fancy of
solar myth that famous episode of Greek legend, where
the good ship Argo passed between the Symple'gades, those
two huge cliffs that opened and closed again with swift
and violent collision. 8 Can any effort of baseless fancy
have brought into the poet's mind a thought so quaint in
itself, yet so fitting with the Karen and Aztec myths of
the gates of Night and Death ? With the Maori legend,
the Argonautic tale has a yet deeper coincidence. In both
the event is to determine the future ; but this thought is
worked out in two converse ways. If Maui passed through

1 Schoolcraf t, * Algic Researches,' vol. ii. p. 40, &c ; Loskiel, ' Gesch. der
Mission,' Barby, 1789, p. 47 (the English edition, part i. p. 35, is incorrect).
See -also Brinton, 'Myths of New World,' p. 63. In an Esquimaux tale,
Giviok comes to the two mountains which shut and open ; paddling swiftly
between, he gets through, but the mountains clashing together crush the
stern of his kayak: Rink, 'Eskimoische Eventyr og Sagn,' p. 98, referred to
by Liebrecht, I.e.

2 Kingsborough, ' Antiquities of Mexico,' vol. i. ; Torquemanda, * Monarquia
Indiana,' xiii. 47 ; ' Con estos has de pasar por medio de dos Sierras, que
se estan batiendo, y encontrando la una con la otra.' Clavigero, vol. ii.
p. 94.

3 Apollodor. i. 9, 22 ; Appollon. Rhod. Argonautica, ii. 310-616 ; Pindar,
' Pythia Carm.' iv. 370.

35O ' MYTHOLOGY.

the entrance of Night and returned to Day, death should
not hold mankind ; if the Argo passed the dashers, the
way should lie open between them for ever. The Argo
sped through in safety, and the Symple'gades can clash no
longer on the passing ship ; Maui was crushed, and man
comes not forth again from Hades.

There is another solar metaphor which describes the sun,
not as a personal creature, but as a member of a yet greater
being. He is called in Java and Sumatra ' Mata-ari/ in
Madagascar ' Maso-andro,' the ' Eye of Day.' If we
look for translation of this thought from metaphor into
myth, we may find it in the New Zealand stories of Maui
setting his own eye up in heaven as the Sun, and the eyes
of his two children as the Morning and the Evening Stars. 1
The nature-myth thus implicitly and explicitly stated is
one widely developed on Aryan ground. It forms part of
that macrocosmic description of the universe well known in
Asiatic myth, and in Europe expressed in that passage of
the Orphic poem which tells of Jove, at once the world's
ruler and the world itself : his glorious head irradiates the
sky where hangs his starry hair, the waters of the sounding
ocean are the belt that girds his sacred body the earth
omniparent, his eyes are sun and moon, his mind, moving
and ruling by counsel all things, is the royal aether that no
voice nor sound escapes :

* Sunt oculi Phoebus, Phceboque ad versa recurrens
Cynthia. Mens verax nullique obnoxius aether
Regius interitu', qui cuncta movetque regitque
Consilio. Vox nulla potest, sonitusve, nee ullus
Hancce Jovis sobolem strepitus, nee fama latere.
Sic animi sensum, et caput immortale beatus
Obtinet : illustre, immensum, immutabile pandens,
Atque lacertorum valido stans robore certus.' *

Where the Aryan myth-maker takes no thought of the

1 Polack, ' Manners of N. Z.' vol. i. p. 16 ; ' New Zealand,' vol. i. p. 358 J
Yate, p. 142 ; Schirren, pp. 88, 165.
8 Euseb. Prsep. Evang. iii. 9.

EYE OF HEAVEN. 35!

lesser light, he can in various terms describe the sun as the
eye of heaven. In the Rig- Veda it is the ' eye of Mitra,
Varuna, and Agni ' ' chakshuh Mitrasya Varunasyah
Agneh.' 1 In the Zend-Avesta it is ' the shining sun with
the swift horses, the eye of Ahura-Mazda ; ' elsewhere both
eyes, apparently sun and moon, are praised. 2 To Hesiod it
is the 'all-seeing eye of Zeus' \dvra iSo>i> Atbs d</>0aA/xos : *
Macrobius speaks of antiquity calling the sun the eye of
Jove *TI rjAtos; ovpdvios d</>0aA./uoV 3 The old Germans, in
calling the sun 4 Wuotan's eye/ 4 recognized Wuotan, Woden
Odhin, as being himself the divine Heaven. These mythic
expressions are of the most unequivocal type. By the hint
they give, conjectural interpretations may be here not indeed
asserted, but suggested, for two of the quaintest episodes of
ancient European myth. Odin, the All-father, say the old
skalds of Scandinavia, sits among his ^Esir in the city
Asgard, on his high throne Hlidskialf (Lid-shelf), whence
he can look down over the whole world discerning all the
deeds of men. He is an old man wrapped in his wide cloak,
and clouding his face with his wide hat, ' os pileo ne cultu
proderetur obnubens,' as Saxo Grammaticus has it. Odin
is one-eyed ; he desired to drink from Mimir's well, but he
had to leave there one of his eyes in pledge, as it is said in
the Voluspa :

' All know I, Odin 1 Where thou hiddest thine eye
In Mimir's famous well.
Mead drinks Mimir every morning
From Wale-father's pledge Wit ye what this is ? '

As Odin's single eye seems certainly to be the sun in
heaven, one may guess what is the lost eye in the well
perhaps the sun's own reflection in any pool, or more

1 Rig- Veda, i. 115; Bohtlingk and Roth, s.v. ' mitra.'

8 Avesta, tr. Spiegel, ' Yac.na,' i. 35 ; Hi., Ixvii., 61-2 ; compare Burnouf,

3 Macrob. Saturnal. i. 21, 13. See Max Muller, ' Chips,' vol. ii. p. 85.
4 Grimm, 'Deutsche Myth.' p. 665. See also Hanusch, 'Slaw. Myth.'
P *'3-

352 MYTHOLOGY.

likely that of the moon, which in popular myth is told
of as found in the well. 1 Possibly, too, some such solar
fancy may explain part of the myth of Perseus. There
are three Scandinavian Norns, whose names are Urdhr,
Verdhandi, and Skuld Was, and Is, and Shall-be
and these three maidens are the ' Weird sisters ' who
fix the lifetime- of all men. So the Fates, the Parkai,
daughters of the inevitable Anagke, divide among them
the periods of time : Lachesis sings the past, Klotho
the present, Atropos the future. Now is it allowable to
consider these fatal sisters as of common nature with
two other mythic sister-triads the Graiai and their
kinsfolk the Gorgons ? 2 If it be so, it is easy to under-
stand why of the three Gorgons one alone was mortal,
whose life her two immortal sisters could not save, for
the deathless past and future cannot save the ever-dying
present. Nor would the riddle be hard to read, what
is the one eye that the Graiai had between them, and
passed from one to another ? the eye of day the sun,

1 Edda, ' Voluspa,' 22 ; 4 Gylfaginning,' 15. See Grimm, ' D.M.' p. 133 ;
1 Reinhart Fuchs.'

2 As to the identification of the Norns and the Fates, see Grimm, 4 D. M.'
pp. 376-86; Max Miiller, 'Chips,' vol. ii. p. 154. It is to be observed in
connexion with the Perseus-myth, that another of its obscure episodes, the
Gorgon's head turning those who look on it into stone, corresponds with
myths of the sun itself. In Hispanibla, men came out of two caves (thus
being born of their mother Earth); the giant who guarded these caves
strayed one night, and the rising sun turned him into a great rock called
Kauta, just as the Gorgon's head turned Atlas the Earth-bearer into the
mountain that bears his name ; after this, others of the early cave-men were
surprised by the sunlight, and turned into stones, trees, plants or beasts
(Friar Roman Pane in ' Life of Columbus in Pinkerton, vol. xii. p. 80 ;
J. G. Miiller, 'Amer. Urrelig.' p. 179). In Central America a Quiche legend
relates how the ancient animals were petrified by the Sun (Brasseur, ' Popol
Vuh,' p. 245). Thus the Americans have the analogue of the Scandinavian
myths of giants and dwarfs surprised by daylight outside their hiding-places,
and turned to stones. Such fancies appear connected with the fancied human
shapes of rocks or ' standing stones ' which peasants still account for as
transformed creatures. Thus in Fiji, two rocks are a male and female deity
turned to stone at daylight, Seemann, ' Viti,' p. 66 ; see Liebrecht in ' Heidel-
berg. Jahrb.' 1864, p. 216. This idea is brought also into the Perseus-myth,
for the rocks abounding in Seriphos are the islanders thus petrified by the
Gorgon's head.

MYTHS OF SUN AND MOON. 353

that the past gives up to the present, and the present
to the future.

Compared with the splendid Lord of Day, the pale Lady
of Night takes, in myth as in nature, a lower and lesser
place. Among the wide legendary group which associates
together Sun and Moon, two striking examples are to be
seen in the traditions by which half-civilized races of South
America traced their rise from the condition of the savage
tribes around them. These legends have been appealed to
even by modern writers as gratefully remembered records
of real human benefactors, who carried long ago to America
the culture of the Old World. But happily for historic
truth, mythic tradition tells its tales without expurgating
the episodes which betray its real character to more critical
observation. The Muyscas of the high plains of Bogota
were once, they said, savages without agriculture, religion,
or law ; but there came to them from the East an old and
bearded man, Bochica, the child of the Sun, and he taught
them to till the fields, to clothe themselves, to worship the
gods, to become a nation. But Bochica had a wicked,
beautiful wife, Huythaca, who loved to spite and spoil her
husband's work ; and she it was who made the river swell
till the land was covered by a flood, and but a few of man-
kind escaped to the mountain-tops. Then Bochica was
wroth, and he drove the wicked Huythaca from the earth,
and made her the Moon, for there had been no moon be-
fore ; and he cleft the rocks and made the mighty cataract
of Tequendama, to let the deluge flow away. Then, when
the land was dry, he gave to the remnant of mankind the
year and its periodic sacrifices, and the worship of the
Sun. Now the people who told this myth had not for-
gotten, what indeed we might guess without their help,
that Bochica was himself Zuhe*, the Sun, and Huythaca
the Sun's wife, the Moon. 1 I

1 Piedrahita, ' Hist. Gen, de las Conquistas del Nuevo Reyno de Granada,'
Antwerp, 1688, part i. lib. i. c. 3 ; Humboldt, ' Monumens,' pi. vi. ; J. G.
Muller, ' Amer. Urrelig.' pp. 423-30.

354 MYTHOLOGY.

Like to this in meaning, though different in fancy, is th<
civilization-myth of the Incas. Men, said this Quichuj
legend, were savages dwelling in caves like wild beasts
devouring wild roots and fruit and human flesh, covering
themselves with leaves and bark or skins of animals. Bui
our father the Sun took pity on them, and sent two of hi<
children, Manco Ccapac and his sister-wife, Mama Occllo
these rose from the lake of Titicaca, and gave to the uncul-
tured hordes law and government, marriage and moral
order, tillage and art and science. Thus was founded the
great Peruvian empire, where in after ages each Inca and
his sister-wife, continuing the mighty race of Manco Ccapac
and Mama Occllo, represented in rule and religion not only
the first earthly royal ancestors, but the heavenly father and
mother of whom we can see these to be personifications,
namely, the Sun himself, and his sister-wife the Moon. 1
Thus the nations of Bogota and Peru, remembering their
days of former savagery, and the association of their culture
with their national religion, embodied their traditions in
myths of an often-recurring type, ascribing to the gods
themselves, in human shape, the establishment of their
own worship.

. The 'inconstant moon ' figures in a group of character-
istic stories. Australian legend says that Mityan, the Moon,
was a native cat, who fell in love with some one else's wife,
and was driven away to wander ever since. 2 The Khasias
of the Himalaya say that the Moon falls monthly in love
with his mother-in-law, who throws ashes in his face, whence
his spots. 8 Slavonic legend, following the same track, says

1 Garcilaso de la Vega, ' Commentaries Reales,' i. c. 1 5 ; Prescott, ' Peru,'
vol. i. p. 7 ; J. G. Miiller, pp. 303-8, 328-39. Other Peruvian versions show
the fundamental solar idea in different mythic shapes (Tr. of Cieza de Leon,
tr. and ed. by C. R. Markham, Hakluyt Soc. 1864, PP- xlix. 298, 316, 372).
W. B. Stevenson (' Residence in S. America,' vol. i. p. 394) and Bastian
(' Mensch,' vol. iii. p. 347) met with a curious perversion of the myth, in
which Inca Manco Ccapac^ corrupted into Ingasman Cocapac, gave rise to a
story of an Englishman figuring in the midst of Peruvian mythology.

2 Stanbridge, ' Abor. of Australia,' in ' Tr. Eth. Soc.' vol. i. p. 301.
8 H. Yule, * Journ. As. Soc. Bengal,' vol. xiii. p. 628.

t DEATH AND REVIVAL OF MOON. 355

t the Moon, King of Night and husband of the Sun,
hlessly loved the Morning Star, wherefore he was cloven
ough in punishment, as we see him in the sky. 1 By a
different train of thought, the Moon's periodic death and re-
vival has suggested a painful contrast to the destiny of man,
in one of the most often-repeated and characteristic myths
of South Africa, which is thus told among the Namaqua.
The Moon once sent the Hare to Men to give this message,
' Like as I die and rise to life again, so you also shall die
and rise to life again,' but the Hare went to the Men and
; said, ' Like as I die and do not rise again, so you shall also
die and not rise to life again.' Then the Hare returned
and told the Moon what he had done, and the Moon struck
at him with a hatchet and slit his lip, as it has remained
ever since, and some say the Hare fled and is still fleeing,
but others say he clawed at the Moon's face and left the
scars that are still to be seen on it, and they also say that
the reason why the Namaqua object to eating the hare (a
prejudice which in fact they share with very different races)
is because he brought to men this evil message. 2 It is re-
markable that a story so closely resembling this, that it is
difficult not to suppose both to be versions from a common
original, is told in the distant Fiji Islands. There was a
dispute between two gods as to how man should die : ' Ra
Vula (the Moon) contended that man should be like
himself disappear awhile and then live again. Ra Kalavo
(the Rat) would not listen to this kind proposal, but said,
" Let man die as a rat dies." And he prevailed.' The dates
of the versions seem to show that the presence of these
myths among the Hottentots and Fijians, at the two
opposite sides of the globe, is at any rate not due to
transmission in modern times. 3

1 Hanusch, ' Slaw. Myth.' p. 269.

8 Bleek, ' Reynard in S. Africa,' pp. 69-74 ; C. J. Andersson, ' Lake
Ngami,' p. 328 ; see Grout, 'Zulu-land,' p. 148 ; Arbousset and Daumas, p.
471. As to connexion of the moon with the hare, cf. Skr. ' c.acanka ; ' and in
Mexico, Sahagun, book vii. c. 2, in Kingsborough, vol. vii.

3 Williams, ' Fiji,' vol. i. p. 205. Compare the Caroline Island myth that

MYTHOLOGY.
|
There is a very elaborate savage nature-myth of thj
generation of the Stars, which may unquestionably serve a>
a clue connecting the history of two distant tribes. Th(;
rude Mintira of the Malayan Peninsula express in plair
terms the belief in a solid firmament, usual in the lowe: :
grades of civilization ; they say the sky is a great pot hek;
over the earth by a cord, and if this cord broke, everything
on earth would be crushed. The Moon is a woman, ami
the Sun also : the Stars are the Moon's children, and the
Sun had in old times as many. Fearing, however, thai
mankind could not bear so much brightness and heat, the}
agreed each to devour her children ; but the Moon, instead;
of eating up her stars, hid them from the Sun's sight, who i
believing them all devoured, ate up her own ; no sooner hac
she done it, than the Moon brought her family out of theiii
hiding-place. When the Sun saw them, filled with rage!
she chased the Moon to kill her ; the chase has lasted ever
since, and sometimes the Sun even comes near enough tc
Hte the Moon, and that is an eclipse ; the Sun, as men may 1
still see, devours his Stars at dawn, and the Moon hides
hers all day while the Sun is near, and only brings them
out at night when her pursuer is far away. Now among
a tribe of North East India, the Ho of Chota-Nagpore,
the myth reappears, obviously from the same source, but
with a varied ending ; the Sun cleft the Moon in twain!
for her deceit, and thus cloven and growing whole again
she remains, and her daughters with her which are the
Stars. 1

From savagery up to civilization, there may be traced in

in the beginning men only quitted life on the last day of the waning moon,
and resuscitated as from a peaceful sleep when she reappeared ; but the evil
spirit Erigirers inflicted a death from which there is no revival : De Drosses,
' Hist, des Navig. aux Terres Australes,' vol. ii. p. 479. Also in a song of
the Indians of California it is said, that even as the moon dies and returns
to life, so they shall be re-born after death ; Duflot de Mofras in Bastian,
' Rechtsverhaltnisse,' p. 385, see ' Psychologic,' p. 54.

1 ' Journ. Ind. Archip.' vol. i. p. 284 ; vol. iv. p. 333 ; Tickcll in * Journ.
As. Soc.' Bengal, vol. ix. part ii. p. 797 ; Latham, ' Descr. Ki.h.' vol. ii.
p. 422.

MYTHS OF STARS. 357

i: the mythology of the Stars a course of thought, changed
i indeed in application, yet never broken in its evident con-
nexion from first to last. The savage sees individual stars
: as animate beings, or combines star-groups into living
celestial creatures, or limbs of them, or objects connected
: with them ; while at the other extremity of the scale of
^civilization, the modern astronomer keeps up just such
ancient fancies, turning them to account in useful survival,
as a means of mapping out the celestial globe. The savage
names and stories of stars and constellations may seem at
first but childish and purposeless fancies ; but it always
happens in the study of the lower races, that the more
means we have of understanding their thoughts, the more
sense and reason do we find in them. Tie aborigines of
Australia say that Yurree and Wanjel, who are the stars we
call Castor and Pollux, pursue Purra the Kangaroo (our
Capella), and kill him at the the beginning of the great heat
and the mirage is the smoke of the fire they roast him by.
They say also that Marpean-Kurrk and Neilloan (Arcturus
and Lyra) were the discoverers of the ant-pupas and the eggs
of the loan-bird, and taught the aborigines to find them for
food. Translated into the language of fact, these simple
myths record the summer place of the stars in question,
and the seasons of ant-pupas and loan-eggs, which seasons
are marked by the stars who are called their discoverers. 1
Not less transparent is the meaning in the beautiful Algon-
quin myth of the Summer-maker. In old days eternal
winter reigned upon the earth, till a sprightly little animal
called the Fisher, helped by other beasts his friends, broke
an opening through the sky into the lovely heaven-land
beyond, let the warm winds pour forth and the summer
descend to earth, and opened the cages of, the prisoned
birds : but when the dwellers in heaven saw their birds let
loose and their warm gales descending, they started in pur-
suit, and shooting their arrows at the Fisher, hit him at
last in his one vulnerable spot at the tip of his tail ; thus

1 Stanbridge in ' Tr. Eth. Soc.' vol. i. pp. 301-3.
i. 2 A

358 MYTHOLOGY.

he died for the good of the inhabitants of earth, and became
the constellation that bears his name, so that still at the
proper season men see him lying as he fell toward the north
on the plains of heaven, with the fatal arrow still sticking
in his tail. 1 Compare these savage stories with Orin pur-
suing the Pleiad sisters who take refuge from him in the
sea, and the maidens who wept themselves to death and
became the starry cluster of the Hyades, whose rising and
setting betokened rain : such mythic creatures might for
simple significance have been invented by savages, even as
the savage constellation-myths might have been made by
ancient Greeks. When we consider that the Australians
who can invent such myths, and invent them with such
fulness of meaning, are savages who put two and one to-
gether to make their numeral for three, we may judge how
deep in the history of culture those conceptions lie, of j
which the relics are still represented in our star-maps by
Castor and Pollux, Arcturus and Sirius, Bootes and Orion,
the Argo and the Charles's Wain, the Toucan and the
Southern Cross. Whether civilized or savage, whether
ancient or new made after the ancient manner, such names
are so like in character that any tribe of men might adopt
them from any other, as American tribes are known to \
receive European names into their own skies, and as our
constellation of the Royal Oak is said to have found its
way, in new copies of the old Hindu treatises, into the
company of the Seven Sages and the other ancient constel-
lations of Brahmanic India.

Such fancies are so fanciful, that two peoples seldom fall
on the same name for a constellation, while, even within
the limits of the same race, terms may differ altogether.
Thus the stars which we call Orion's Belt are in New

1 Schoolcraft, ' Algic Res/ vol. i. pp. 57-66. The story of the hero or
deity invulnerable like Achilles save in one weak spot, recurs in the tales
of the slaying of the Shining Manitu, whose scalp alone was vulnerable, and
of the mighty Kwasind, who could be killed only by the cone of the white
pine wounding the vulnerable place on the crown of his head (vol. i. p. 153 I
vol. ii. p.

MYTHS OF CONSTELLATIONS. 359

Zealand either the Elbow of Maui, or they form the stern
of the Canoe of Tamarerete, whose anchor dropped from
the prow is the Southern Cross. 1 The Great Bear is equally
like a Wain, Orion's Belt serves as well for Frigga's or
Mary's Spindle, or Jacob's Staff. Yet sometimes natural
correspondences occur. The seven sister Pleiades seem to
the Australians a group of girls playing to a corroboree ;
while the North American Indians call them the Dancers;
and the Lapps the Company of Virgins. 2 Still more
striking is the correspondence between savages and cultured
nations in fancies of the bright starry band that lies like a
road across the sky. The Basutos call it the ' Way of the
Gods ; ' the Ojis say it is the ' Way of Spirits,' which
souls go up to heaven by. 3 North American tribes know it
as ' the Path of the Master of Life,' the ' Path of Spirits/
' the Road of Souls,' where they travel to the land beyond
the grave, and where their camp-fires may be seen blazing
as brighter stars. 4 Such savage imaginations of the Milky
Way fit with the Lithuanian myth of the ' Road of the
Birds,' at whose end the souls of the good, fancied as
flitting away at death like birds, dwell free and happy. 6
That souls dwell in the Galaxy was a thought familiar to
the Pythagoreans, who gave it on their master's word that
the souls that crowd there descend, and appear to men as
dreams, 6 and to the Manichaeans whose fancy transferred
pure souls to this ' column of light,' whence they could

1 Taylor, ' New Zealand,' p. 363.

8 Stanbridge, I.e.; Charlevoix, vol. vi. p. 148 ; Leems, ' Lapland,' in Pinker-
ton, vol. i. p. 411. The name of the Bear occurring in North America in
connexion with the stars of the Great and Little Bear (Charlevoix, I.e.;
Cotton Mather in Schoolcraft, ' Tribes,' vol. i. p. 284) has long been remarked
on (Goguet, vol. i. p. 262 ; vol. ii. p. 366, but with reference to Greenland,
see Cranz, p. 294). See observations on the history of the Aryan name in
Max Miiller, ' Lectures,' 2nd series, p. 361.

3 Casalis, p. 196 ; Waitz, vol. ii. p. 191.

* Long's Exp. vol. i. p. 288 ; Schoolcraft, part i. p. 272 ; Le Jeune in ' Rel.
des Jes. de la Nouvelle France,' 1634, p. 18 ; Loskiel, part i. p. 35 ; J. G.
Miiller, p. 63.

8 Hanusch, pp. 272, 407, 415.

8 Porphyr. de Antro Nympharum, 28 ; Macrob. de Somn. Scip. 1.12.

360 MYTHOLOGY.

come down to earth and again return. 1 It is a fall from
such ideas of the Galaxy to the Siamese ' Road of the
White Elephant,' the Spaniards' ' Road of Santiago/ or
the Turkish ' Pilgrims' Road,' and a still lower fall to the
' Straw Road ' of the Syrian, the Persian, and the Turk,
who thus compare it with their lanes littered with the
morsels of straw that fall from the nets they carry it in.*
But of all the fancies which have attached themselves to
the celestial road, we at home have the quaintest. Passing
along the short and crooked way from St. Paul's to Cannon
Street, one thinks to how small a remnant has shrunk the
name of the great street of the Wsetlingas, which in old
days ran from Dover through London into Wales. But
there is a Watling Street in heaven as well as on earth,
once familiar to Englishmen, though now almost forgotten
even in local dialect. Chaucer thus speaks of it in his
' House of Fame : '

' Lo there (quod he) cast up thine eye
Se yondir, lo, the Galaxie,
The whiche men clepe The Milky Way,
For it is white, and some parfay,
Ycallin it han Watlynge strete.' *

Turning from the mythology of the heavenly bodies, a
glance over other districts of nature-myth will afford fresh
evidence that such legend has its early home within the
precincts of savage culture. It is thus with the myths of
the Winds. The New Zealanders tell how Maui can ride
upon the other Winds or imprison them in their caves, but
he cannot catch the West wind nor find its cave to roll a

1 Beausobre, 'Hist, de Maniche"e,' vol. ii. p. 513.

8 Bastian, 'Oestl. Asien,' vol. iii. p. 341; 'Chronique de Tabari,' tr.
Dubeux, p. 24; Grimm, 'D.M.' p. 330, &c.

8 Chaucer, * House of Fame,' ii. 427. With reference to questions of Aryan
mythology illustrated by the savage galaxy-myths, see Pictet, 'Origines,'
part ii. p. 582, &c. Mr. J. Jeremiah informs me that 'Watling Street' is
still (1871) a name for the Milky Way in Scotland; see also his paper on
'Welsh names of the Milky Way,' Philological Soc., Nov. 17, 1871. The
corresponding name ' London Road ' is used in Suffolk.

MYTHS OF WINDS. 361

stone against the mouth, and therefore it prevails, yet
from time to time he all but overtakes it, and hiding in
its cave for shelter it dies away. 1 Such is the fancy in
classic poetry of Aeolus holding the prisoned winds in his
dungeon cave :

' Hie vasto rex Aeolus antro

Luct antes ventos, tempest atesque sonoras
Imperio premit, ac vinclis et carcere fraenat.'*

The myth of the Four Winds is developed among the
native races of America with a range and vigour and beauty
scarcely rivalled elsewhere in the mythology of the world-
Episodes belonging to this branch of Red Indian folklore
are collected in Schoolcraft's ' Algic Researches/ and thence
rendered with admirable taste and sympathy, though un-
fortunately not with proper truth to the originals, in Long-
fellow's masterpiece, the ' Song of Hiawatha.' The West
Wind Mudjekeewis is Kabeyun, Father of the Winds,
Wabun is the East Wind, Shawondasee the South Wind,
Kabibonokka the North Wind. But there is another
mighty wind not belonging to the mystic quaternion,
Manabozho the North- West Wind, therefore described with
mythic appropriateness as the unlawful child of Kabeyun.
The fierce North Wind, Kabibnokka, in vain strives to
force Shingebis, the lingering diver-bird, from his warm
and happy winter-lodge ; and the lazy South Wind, Sha-
wondasee, sighs for the maiden of the prairie with her sunny
hair, till it turns to silvery white, and as he breathes upon
her, the prairie dandelion has vanished. 8 Man naturally
divides his horizon into four quarters, before and behind,
right and left, and thus comes to fancy the world a square,
and to refer the winds to its four corners. Dr. Brinton, in
his ' Myths of the New World/ has well traced from these
ideas the growth of legend after legend among the native

1 Yate, * New Zealand,' p. 144, see Ellis, 'Polyn. Res.' vol. ii. p. 417.
* Virg. Aeneid, i. 56; Homer, Odyss. x. I.

8 Schoolcraft, 'Algic Res.' vol. i. p. 200; vol. ii. pp. 122, 214; * Indian
ribes,' part iii, p. 324.

362 , MYTHOLOGY.

races of America, where four brother heroes, or mythic an-
cestors or divine patrons of mankind, prove, on closer view,
to be in personal shape the Four Winds. 1

The Vedic hymns to the Maruts, the Storm Winds, who
tear asunder the forest kings and make the rocks shiver,
and assume again, after their wont, the form of new-born
babes, the mythic feats of the child Hermes in the Homeric
hymn, the legendary birth of Boreas from Astraios and Eos,
Starry Heaven and Dawn, work out, on Aryan ground,
mythic conceptions that Red Indian tale-tellers could
understand and rival. 2 The peasant who keeps up in fire-
side talk the memory of the Wild Huntsman, Wodejager,
the Grand Veneur of Fontainebleau, Herne the Hunter of
Windsor Forest, has almost lost the significance of this
grand old storm-myth. By mere force of tradition, the
name of the ' Wish ' or ' Wush ' hounds of the Wild
Huntsman has been preserved through the west of England ;
the words must for ages past have lost their meaning among
the country folk, though we may plainly recognize in them
Woden's ancient well-known name, old German ' Wunsch.'
As of old, the Heaven-God drives the clouds before him in
raging tempest across the sky, while, safe within the cottage
walls, the- tale-teller unwittingly describes in personal
legendary shape this same Wild Hunt of the Storm. 3

It has many a time occurred to the savage poet or philo-
sopher to realize the thunder, or its cause, in myths of a
Thunder-bird. Of this wondrous creature North American
legend has much to tell. He is the bird of the great
Manitu, as the eagle is of Zeus, or he is even the great
Manitu himself incarnate. The Assiniboins not only know

1 Brinton, ' Myths of the New World,' ch. iii.

2 ' Rig- Veda,' tr. by Max Miiller, vol. i. (Hymns to Maruts) ; Welcker,
' Griech. Gotterl.' vol. iii. p. 67 ; Cox, ' Mythology of Aryan Nations,' vol. ii.
ch. v.

8 Grimm, ' D. M.' pp. 126, 599, 894 ; Hunt, ' Pop. Rom.' ist ser. p. xix. ;
Baring-Gould, ' Book of Werewolves,' p. 101 ; see ' Myths of the Middle
Ages,' p. 25 ; Wuttke, ' Deutsche Volksaberglaube,' pp. 13, 236 ; Monnier,
' Traditions,' pp. 75, &c., 741, 747.

MYTHS OF THUNDER, 363

his existence, but have even seen him, and in. the far
north the story is told how he created the world. The
Ahts of Vancouver's Island talk of Tootooch, the mighty
bird dwelling aloft and far away, the flap of whose wings
makes the thunder (Tootah), and his tongue is the forked
lightning. There were once four of these birds in the land,
and they fed on whales ; but the great deity Quawteaht,
entering into a whale, enticed one thunder-bird after an-
other to swoop down and seize him with his talons, when
plunging to the bottom of the sea he drowned it. Thus
three of them perished, but the last one spread his wings
and flew to the distant height where he has since remained.
The meaning of the story may probably be that thunder-
storms come especially from one of the four quarters of
heaven. Of such myths, perhaps that told among the
Dacotas is the quaintest : Thunder is a large bird, they
say : hence its velocity. The old bird begins the thunder ;
its rumbling noise is caused by an immense quantity of
young birds, or thunders, who continue it, hence the long
duration of the peals. The Indian says it is the young
birds, or thunders, that do the mischief ; they are like the
young mischievous men" who will not listen to good counsel.
The old thunder or bird is wise and good, and does not
kill anybody, nor do any kind of mischief. Descending
southward to Central America, there is found mention
of the bird Voc, the messenger of Hurakan, the Tempest-
god (whose name has been adopted in European languages
as huracano, ouragan, hurricane) of the Lightning and*
of the Thunder. So among Caribs, Brazilians, Hervey
Islanders and Karens, Bechuanas and Basutos, we find
legends of a flapping or flashing Thunder-bird, which
seem simply to translate into myth the thought of thunder
and lightning descending from the upper regions of the
air, the home of the eagle and the vulture. 1

1 Pr. Max v. Wied, ' Reise in N. A.' vol. i. pp. 446, 455 ; vol. H. pp. 152,
223 ; Sir Alex. Mackenzie, ' Voyages/ p. cxvii. ; Sproat, ' Scenes of Savage
Life ' (Vancouver's I.), pp. 177, 213 ; Irving, ' Astoria,' vol. ii. ch. xxii. ; Le

364 MYTHOLOGY.

The Heaven-god dwells in the regions of the sky, and
thus what form could be fitter for him and for his messengers
than the likeness of a bird ? But to cause the ground to
quake beneath our feet, a being of quite different nature is
needed, and accordingly the office of supporting the solid
earth is given in various countries to various monstrous
creatures, human or animal in character, who make their
office manifest from time to time by a shake given in
negligence or sport or anger to their burden. Wherever
earthquakes are felt, we are likely to find a version of the
great myth of the Earth-bearer. Thus in Polynesia the
Tongans say that Maui upholds the earth on his prostrate
body, and when he tries to turn over into an easier posture
there is an earthquake, and the people shout and beat the
ground with sticks to make him lie still. Another version
forms part of the interesting myth lately mentioned, which
connects the under- world whither the sun descends at night,
with the region of subterranean volcanic fire and of earth-
quake. The old Maui lay by his fire in the dead-land of
Bulotu, when his grandson Maui came down by the cavern
entrance ; the young Maui carried off the fire, they wrestled,
the old Maui was overcome, and has lain there bruised and
drowsy ever since, underneath the earth, which quakes
when he turns over in his sleep. 1 In Celebes we hear of
the world-supporting Hog, who rubs himself against a tree,
and then there is an earthquake. 2 Among the Indians of
North America, it is said that earthquakes come of the
movement of the great world-bearing Tortoise. Now this
Tortoise seems but a mythic picture of the Earth itself,

Jeune, op. cit. 1634, p. 26 ; Schoolcraft, ' Indian Tribes,' part iii. p. 233,
' Algic Res.' vol. ii. pp. 1 14-6, 199 ; Catlin, vol. ii. p. 164 ; Brasseur, ' Popol
Vuh/ p. 71 and Index, ' Hurakan ; ' J. G. Miiller, ' Amer. Urrel.' pp. 222,
271 ; Ellis, ' Polyn. Res.' vol. ii. p. 417 ; Jno. Williams, ' Missionary Enter-
prise,' p. 93 ; Mason, I.e. p. 217 ; Moffat, ' South Africa,' p. 338 ; Casalis,
' Basutos,' p. 266; Callaway, 'Religion of Amazulu,' p. 119.

1 Mariner, 'Tonga Is.' vol. ii. p. 120; S. S. Farmer, 'Tonga,' p. 135;
Schirren, pp. 35-7.

* ' Journ. Ind. Archip.' vol. ii. p. 837.

SUJ

Ch

MYTHS OF EARTHQUAKE. 365

d thus the story only expresses in mythic phrase the very
t that the earth quakes ; the meaning is but one degree
distinct than among the Caribs, who say when there is
earthquake that their Mother Earth is dancing. 1 Among
higher races of the continent, such ideas remain little
anged in nature ; the Tlascalans said that the tired world-
upporting deities shifting their burden to a new relay
.used the earthquake ; a the Chibchas said it was their god
ibchacum moving the earth from shoulder to shoulder. 8
The myth ranges in Asia through as wide a stretch of
culture. The Kamchadals tell of Tuil the Earthquake-
god, who sledges below ground, and when his dog shakes
off fleas or snow there is an earthquake ; 4 Ta Ywa, the
solar hero of the Karens, set Shie-oo beneath the earth
to carry it, and there is an earthquake when he moves. 8
The world-bearing elephants of the Hindus, the world-
supporting frog of the Mongol Lamas, the world-bull of the
Moslems, the gigantic Omophore of the Manichaean cosmo-
logy, are all creatures who carry the earth on their backs or
heads, and shake it when they stretch or shift. 6 Thus in
European mythology the Scandinavian Loki, strapped down
with thongs of iron in his subterranean cavern, writhes
when the overhanging serpent drops venom on him ; or
Prometheus struggles beneath the earth to break his bonds ;
or the Lettish Drebkuls or Poseidon the Earth-shaker
makes the ground rock beneath men's feet. 7 From
thorough myths of imagination such as most of these, it
may be sometimes possible to distinguish philosophic myths
like them in form, but which appear to be attempts at

1 J. G. Muller, ' Amer. Urrelig.' pp. 61, 122.
Brasseur, ' Mexique,' vol. iii. p. 482.
Pouchet, ' Plurality of Races/ p. 2.
Steller, 4 Kamtschatka/ p. 267.
Mason, ' Karens,' I.e. p. 182.

Bell, ' Tr. in Asia/ in Pinkerton, vol. vii. p. 369 ; Bastian, ' Oestl. Asien/
vol. ii. p. 1 68 ; Lane, ' Thousand and one Nights/ vol. i. p. 21 ; see Latham,
' Descr. Eth.' vol. ii. p. 171 5 Beausobre, ' Maniche"e/ vol. i. p. 243.
7 Edda, ' Gylfaginning/ 50 ; Grimm, ' D. M.' p. 777, &c.

366 MYTHOLOGY.

serious explanation without even a metaphor. The Japanese
think that earthquakes are caused by huge whales creeping
underground, having been probably led to this idea by
finding the fossil bones which seem the remains of such
subterranean monsters, just as we know that the Siberians
who find in the ground the mammoth-bones and tusks
account for them as belonging to huge burrowing beasts,
and by force of this belief, have brought themselves to think
they can sometimes see the earth heave and sink as the
monsters crawl below. Thus, in investigating the earth-
quake myths of the world, it appears that two processes,
the translation into mythic language of the phenomenon
itself, and the crude scientific theory to account for it by a
real moving animal underground, may result in legends of
very striking similarity. 1

In thus surveying the mythic wonders of heaven and
earth, sun, moon, and stars, wind, thunder, and earthquake,
it is possible to set out in investigation under conditions of
actual certainty. So long as such beings as Heaven or Sun
are consciously talked of in mythic language, the meaning
of their legends is open to no question, and the actions
ascribed to them will as a rule be natural and apposite. But
when the phenomena of nature take a more anthropomorphic
form, and become identified with personal gods and heroes,
and when in after times these beings, losing their first con-
sciousness of origin, become centres round which floating
fancies cluster, then their sense becomes obscure and cor-
rupt, and the consistency of their earlier character must no
longer be demanded. In fact, the unreasonable expectation
of such consistency in nature-myths, after they have passed
into what may be called their heroic stage, is one of the
mythologist's most damaging errors. The present exami-
nation of nature-myths has mostly taken them in their
primitive and unmistakable condition, and has only been
in some degree extended to include closely-corresponding

1 Kaempfer, ' Japan,' in Pinkerton, vol. vii. p. 684 ; see mammoth-myths
in ' Early Hist, of Mankind,' p. 315.

MYTHS OF EARTHQUAKE. 367

legends in a less easily interpret able state. It has lain
beyond my scope to enter into any systematic discussion of
the views of Grimm, Grote, Max Miiller, Kuhn, Schirren,
Cox, Breal, Dasent, Kelly, and other mythologists. Even
the outlines here sketched out have been purposely left
without filling in surrounding detail which might confuse
their shape, although this strictness has caused the neglect
of many a tempting hint to work out episode after episode,
by tracing their relation to the myths of far-off times and
lands. It has rather been my object to bring prominently
into view the nature-mythology of the lower races, that their
clear and fresh mythic conceptions may serve as a basis in
studying the nature-myths of the world at large. The
evidence and interpretation here brought forward, imperfect
as they are, seem to countenance a strong opinion as to the
historical development of legends which describe in personal
shape the life of nature. The state of mind to which such
imaginative fictions belong is found in full vigour in the
savage condition of mankind, its growth and inheritance
continue into the higher culture of barbarous or half-civi-
lized nations, and at last in the civilized world its effects
pass more and more from realized belief into fanciful,
affected, and even artificial poetry.


 
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