"
The Quillayute is a Chimakoan tribe living
along the Quillayute River, a six-mile river on the Olympic Peninsula. The
fishing village of Lapush is at its mouth.
These stories are adapted from Indian
Legends of the Pacific Northwest by Ella E. Clark, University of California
Press, 1953. ..."
The Quillayute is a Chimakoan tribe living
along the Quillayute River, a six-mile river on the Olympic Peninsula. The
fishing village of Lapush is at its mouth.
These stories are adapted from Indian
Legends of the Pacific Northwest by Ella E. Clark, University of California
Press, 1953.
Long ago, there was a sad time in the
land of the Quillayute. For days and days, great storms blew. Rain and hail and
then sleet and snow came down upon the land. The hailstones were so large that
many of the people were killed. The other Quillayute were driven from their
coast villages to the great prairie, which was the highest part of their land.
There the people grew thin and weak from
hunger. The hailstones had beaten down the ferns, the camas, and the berries.
Ice locked the rivers so the men could not fish. Storms rocked the ocean so the
fishermen could not go out in their canoes for deep-sea fishing. Soon, the
people had eaten all the grass and roots on the prairie; there was no food left.
As children died without food, even the strongest and bravest of their fathers
could do nothing. They called upon the Great Spirit for help, but no help came.
At last the Great Chief of the Quillayute
called a meeting of his people. He was old and wise. "Take comfort, my people,"
the Chief said. "We will call again upon the Great Spirit for help. If no help
comes, then we will know it is His will that we die. If it is not His will that
we live, then we will die bravely, as brave Quillayute have always died. Let us
talk with the Great Spirit."
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