In the beginning there was nothing but soft darkness, and Raven
beat and beat with his wings until the darkness packed itself
down into solid earth. Then there was only the icy black ocean
and a narrow strip of shoreline. But people came soon to live
along the coast. And Raven felt sorry for them, poor, sickly
things, who never had any sunshine. They lived by chewing on
nuts and leaves, and crushed the roots of the alder trees for
something to drink.
"I must help them," thought Raven; and he flew down to earth,
calling, "Ga, ga, ga!" and gathered the people together. Like
ghosts, they were, shadowy and pale in the misty darkness.
"Raven has come!" they told each other. "It is Raven-Who-Sets-
Things-Right."
The poor things were encouraged, and they gathered round to see
what he would do.
Raven plucked a branch from an alder, and scattered the leaves on
the surface of a pool. At once the leaves were sucked under, and
the water started to bubble. After the pool had boiled for a
moment, the surface cleared and fish began to jump there. So
that was how Raven gave the people fish.
But now that they had fish to eat, they were thirstier than
ever. They called on Raven, and down he came, and the people
said, "Here is Raven-Who-Sets-Things-Right."
Raven knew that there was only one spring of fresh water in all
the world. A man named Ganook had built his house around it, and
refused to give any away.
"Maybe," thought Raven, "I can drink enough to carry some back to
the people."
So he went to the house and asked to come in, and Ganook was very
glad to have his company. Raven sat down and made polite
conversation, and pretty soon he asked for a drink of water.
"Very well," said Ganook grudgingly, and showed him the spring, a
crystal pool welling up in a basin of rock.
"Don't drink it all!" Ganook warned him. "You know that's the
only fresh water in all the world."
Raven knew it well; that was what he had come for. But he said,
"Just a sip!" and drank until he staggered.
"Hold on there, Raven!" cried Ganook. "Are you trying to drink
the well dry?"
That was just what Raven was trying to do, but he passed it off
lightly. He made himself comfortable close to the fire and said,
"Ganook, let me tell you a story."
Then Raven started out on a long dull story about four dull
brothers who went on a long dull journey. As he went along he
made up dull things to add to it, and Ganook's eyelids drooped,
and Raven spoke softly, and more and more slowly, and Ganook's
chin dropped on his chest.
"So then," said Raven gently, with his eyes on Ganook, "on and on
through the long gray valley through the soft gray fog went the
four tall gray brothers. And now, snore!" And Ganook began to
snore.
Quick as a thought, Raven darted to the spring and stuck his beak
into the water. But no sooner had he lifted his head to swallow
than Ganook started up with a terrible snort, and said, "Go on,
go on, I'm listening! I'm not asleep." Then he shook his head
and blinked his eyes and said, "Where are you, Raven? What are
you doing?"
"Just walking around for exercise," Raven assured him, and back
he went, and in a low, unchanging voice he went on with the dull
story of the four brothers. No sooner had he started than Ganook
began to nod, and his chin dropped down, and he jerked it back
and opened his eyes and scowled at Raven, and nodded his head and
said, "Go on! What next?" and his head dropped down upon his
chest.
"So on and on," said Raven slowly, "over the hills, went the four
tall gray brothers. The air was thick and gray around them. Fog
was stealing softly over the mountains. Fog before them, fog
behind them, soft, cloudy fog. And now, snore!" And Ganook
began to snore.
Quietly Raven slipped to the spring, and, glub, glub, glub, he
drank up the water until the pool was dry. But as he lifted his
head for a last long gulp, Ganook leaped up and saw what he was
doing.
"So, Raven!" shouted Ganook. "You think you can lull me to sleep
and steal my water!"
He picked up his club and started to chase Raven round and round
the fire. Raven would run a few steps and flap his big wings and
rise a few inches off the floor. Then with a last tremendous
flap he went sailing towards the open smoke hole. But he had
swallowed so much water that he stuck fast in the opening, and
there he struggled, while Ganook shouted, "You squint-eyed Raven,
I've got you now, Raven! You miserable thief!" And Ganook threw
green alder logs on the fire and made a great smoke which came
billowing up and almost choked Raven to death.
Raven hung there, strangling and struggling, until at last he
pulled free with a mighty wrench and went wobbling heavily across
the sky. He was so heavy he flew in a crooked line, and as he
flew he spurted little streams of water from his bill. These
became rivers, first the Nass and the Sitka, then the Taku and
the Iskut and the Stikine. Since Raven flew in a crooked line,
all the rivers are crooked as snakes. Here and there he
scattered single drops, and these became narrow creeks and salmon
pools.
And so Raven brought fresh water to the people but he bore the
mark of that smoke hole ever after. He had gone to Ganook as a
great, white, snowy creature, but from that day on, Raven was
black, as black as the endless sky of the endless night.
Return to Indigenous Peoples' Literature
Compiled by: Glenn Welker
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