Native American Lore
Chickasaw-
How Glooskap Found the
Summer
Long
ago a mighty race of Indians lived near the sunrise, and they called themselves
Wawaniki---Children of Light. Glooskap was their master. He was kind to his
people and did many great deeds for them.
Once
in Glooskaps day it grew extremely cold. Snow and ice covered everything. Fires
would not give enough warmth. The corn would not grow. His people were perishing
from cold and famine. Glooskap set forth for the far north where all was ice.
Here in a wigwam he found the great giant Winter. It was Winter's icy breath
that had frozen the land.
Glooskap entered the wigwam and sat down. Winter gave him a pipe, and as they
smoked the giant told tales of olden times when he reigned everywhere and all
the land was silent, white, and beautiful. His frost charm fell upon Glooskap
and as the giant talked on, Glooskap fell asleep.
For
six months he slept like a bear, then the charm left him. He was too strong for
it and awoke. Soon now Glooskap's talebearer, the Loon, a wild bird who lived on
the lakeshores, brought him strange news. He described a country far to the
south where it was always warm. There lived the all-powerful Summer who could
easily overcome the giant Winter. To save his people from cold and famine and
death, Glooskap decided to find her.
Far
off to the southern seashores he went. He sang the magic song which whales obey
and up came an old friend---a whale who served as his carrier when he wished to
go out to sea. This whale had a law for travelers. She always said: "You must
shut your eyes while I carry you. If you do not, I am sure to go aground on a
reef or sand-bar and be unable to get off. You could be drowned." Glooskap got
on the whale's back and for many days they traveled together. Each day the water
grew warmer and the air softer and sweeter, for it came from spicy shores. The
odors were no longer those of salt, but of fruits and flowers.
Soon
they found themselves in shallow water. Down in the sand, clams were singing a
song of warning: "Keep out to sea, for the water here is shallow." The whale
asked Glooskap, who understood the language of all creatures: "What do they
say?" Glooskap, wishing to land at once, only replied: "They tell you to hurry,
for a storm is coming."
The
whale hurried on accordingly until she was close to land. Now Glooskap did the
forbidden; he opened his left eye, to peep. At once the whale stuck hard on to
the beach so that Glooskap, leaping from her head, was able to walk ashore on
dry land. Thinking she could never get away, the whale became angry. But
Glooskap put one end of his strong bow against the whale's jaw and, taking the
other end in his hands, placed his feet against the high bank. With a mighty
push, he sent her out into the deep water.
Far
inland strode Glooskap and found it warmer at every step. In the forest he came
upon a beautiful woman, dancing in the center of a group of young girls. Her
long brown hair was crowned with flowers and her arms filled with blossoms. She
was Summer. Glooskap knew that here at last was the one who by her charms could
melt old Winter's heart. He leaped to catch her and would not let her go.
Together they journeyed the long way back to the lodge of old Winter. Winter
welcomed Glooskap but he planned to freeze him to sleep again. This time,
however, Glooskap did the talking. His charm proved the stronger one and soon
sweat began to run down Winters face. He knew that his power was gone and the
charm of Frost broken. His icy tent melted away.
Summer now used her own
special power and everything awoke. The grass grew green and the snow ran down
the rivers, carrying away the dead leaves. Old Winter wept to see his power
taken away. But Summer said, "Now that I have proved I am more powerful than
you, I give you all the country to the far north for your own, and there I shall
never disturb you. Six months of every year you may return to Glooskap's country
and reign as before, but you are to be less severe with your power. During the
other six months, I will come back from the South and rule the land."
Old Winter could do
nothing but accept this. So it is that he appears in Glooskap's country each
year to reign for six months, but with a softer rule. When he comes, Summer runs
home to her warm south land. When at the end of six months she returns to drive
old Winter away, she awakens the north and gives it the joys that only she can
bestow.