When Tu-chai-pai made the world, the earth was the woman, the sky
was the man. The sky came down upon the earth. The world in the
beginning was pure lake covered with bulrushes.
Tu-chai-pai and
Yo-ko-mat-is, his brother, sat together, stooping far over, bowed
down under the weight of the sky. The Maker said to the brother,
"What am I going to do?"
"I do not know," said Yo-ko-mat-is.
"Let us go a little farther," said the Maker.
Then they went a little farther and sat down again.
"Now, what am I going to do?" said Tu-chai-pai.
"I don't know."
All this time Tu-chai-pai knew what he was going to do, but he was
asking the brother.
Then he said, "We-hicht, we-hicht, we-hicht," three times; and he
took tobacco in his hand, and rubbed it fine, and blew upon it three
times, and every time he blew, the heavens rose higher above their
heads. Then the Maker told his brother to do the same thing, and he
did.
The heavens went high, and there was the sky. Then they did it
both together, "We-hicht, we-hicht, we-hicht"; and both took the
tobacco, and rubbed it, and puffed on it, and sent the sky up.
Then they placed the north, south, east, and west.
Tu-chai-pai made
a line upon the ground.
"Why do you make that line?"
"I am making a line from east to west, and I name them thus, Y-nak,
east; A-uk, west. Now you may make it from north to south."
Then Yo-ko-mat-is was thinking.
"Why are you thinking?"
"Oh, I must think; but now I have arranged it. I draw a line thus
(a crossline), and I name it Ya-wak, south; Ka-tulk, north."
"Why have we done this?"
"I don't know."
"Then I will tell you. Three or four men are coming from the east,
and from the west three or four Indians are coming."
Then Tu-chai-pai said, "Now I am going to make hills and valleys,
and little hollows of water."
"Why are you making all these things?"
The Maker said, "After a while, when men come and are walking back
and forth in the world, they will need to drink water, or they will
die."
He had already put the ocean down in its bed, but he made these
little waters for the people.
Then he made forests, and said, "After a while men will die of cold
unless I make wood for them to use. What are we going to do now?"
"I don't know."
"We're going to make the Indians first."
And he formed the men and
did it well, but he didn't do such a good job on the women because
they were hard to make, and it took a long time. He gave beards to
the men and boys, but not to the women.
After the Indians he made the
Mexicans, and he finished all his creating. Then he called out very
loud,
"You can never die, and you can never be tired, but you shall
walk all the time."
After that he made them so that they could sleep
at night, and need not walk around all the time in the darkness. At
last he told them that they must travel toward the east, toward the
light.
The people walked in darkness till he made the light. Then they came
out and searched for the light, and when they found it they were
glad.
Then he called out to Yo-ko-mat-is,
"You may make the moon, as
I have made the sun. Sometime it is going to die, and at that time
all men, young and old, must run races."
All the people talked about the matter, and they understood that
they must run these races, and that Tu-chai-pai was looking at them
to see that they did this.
After the Maker did all this, he did
nothing more, but he was thinking many days.
- Based on a tale reported by Constance Goddard du Bois in 1901