Part I
Once there was a time when men knew no joy. Their whole life was work, food, and sleep. One day went by like another. They toiled, they slept, they awoke again to toil. Monotony rusted their minds.
There was a man and his wife who lived alone in their dwelling not far from the sea. They had three sons, all anxious to be as good huntsmen as their father, and even before they were full grown they worked hard to become strong and enduring. Their father and mother felt proud and secure in the thought that the boys would provide for their old age when they could no longer help themselves.
But it happened that the eldest son, and after a while the second one, went hunting and never came back. They left no trace behind; all search was in vain. The father and mother grieved deeply over their loss and watched now with great anxiety over the youngest boy, who was by this time big enough to go hunting with his father. The son, who was called Ermine, liked best to stalk caribou, while his father preferred to hunt sea creatures. As hunters cannot spend all their lives in anxiety, soon the son was allowed to go where he pleased inland while the father paddled to sea in his kayak.
One day, stalking caribou as usual, Ermine suddenly saw a mighty eagle, a big young eagle that circled over him. Ermine pulled out his arrows, but did not shoot as the eagle flew down and settled on the ground a short distance from him. It took off its hood and became a young man who said to the boy:
"It was I who killed your two brothers. I will kill you too unless you promise to hold a festival of song when you get home. Will you or won't you?"
"Gladly, but I don't understand what you say. What is song? What is a festival?"
"Will you or won't you?"
"Gladly, but I don't know what it is."
"If you follow me, my mother will teach you what you don't understand. Your two brothers scorned the gifts of song and merrymaking; they would not learn, so I killed them. Now you may come with me, and as soon as you have learned to put words together into a song and to sing it--as soon as you have learned to dance for joy, you shall be free to go home to your dwelling."
"I'll come with you," answered Ermine. And off they set.
The eagle was no longer a bird but a big strong man in a gleaming cloak of eagles' feathers. They walked and walked, farther and farther inland, through gorges and valleys, onward to a high mountain, which they began to climb.
"High up on this mountaintop stands our house," said the young eagle. And they clambered up and up until they had a wide view over the plains of the Caribou hunters.
As they approached the crest of the mountain, they suddenly heard a throbbing sound, which grew louder and louder the nearer they came to the top. It sounded like the stroke of huge hammers, and so loud that it set Ermine's ears humming.
"Do you hear anything?" asked the eagle.
"Yes, a strange deafening noise, that isn't like anything I've ever heard before."
"It is the beating of my mother's heart," answered the eagle.
So they approached the eagle's house built right on the uttermost peaks.
"Wait here until I come back. I must prepare my mother," said the eagle, and went in.
A moment after, he came back and fetched Ermine. They entered a big room, fashioned like the dwellings of men, and on the bunk, quite alone, sat the eagle's mother, aged, feeble, and sad. Her son said:
"Here's a man who has promised to hold a song festival when he gets home. But he says men don't understand how to put words together into songs, nor even how to beat drums and dance for joy. Mother, men don't know how to make merry, and now this young man has come up here to learn."
This speech brought fresh life to the feeble old mother eagle, and her tired eyes lit up suddenly while she said:
"First you must build a feast hall where many men may gather."
So the two young men set to work and built the feast hall, which is larger and finer than ordinary houses. When it was finished the mother eagle taught them to put words together into songs and to add tones to the words so that they could be sung. She made a drum and taught them to beat upon it in rhythm with the music, and she showed them how they should dance to the songs. When Ermine had learned all this she said:
"Before every festival you must collect much meat, and then call together many men. This you must do after you have built your feast hall and made your songs. For when men assemble for a festival they require sumptuous meals."
"But we know of no men but ourselves," answered Ermine.
"Men are lonely, because they have not yet received the gift of joy," said the mother eagle. "Make all your preparations as I have told you. When all is ready you shall go out and seek for men. You will meet them in couples. Gather them until they are many in number and invite them to come with you. Then hold your festival of song."
Thus spoke the old mother eagle, and when she had minutely instructed Ermine in what he should do, she finally said to him:
"I may be an eagle, yet I am also an aged woman with the same pleasures as other women. A gift calls for a return, therefore it is only fitting that in farewell you should give me a little sinew string. It will be but a slight return, yet it will give me pleasure."
Ermine was at first miserable, for wherever was he to find sinew string so far from his home? Suddenly he remembered that his arrowheads were lashed to the shafts with sinew string. He unwound these and gave the string to the eagle. The young eagle again drew on his shining cloak and bade his guest bestride his back and put his arms round his neck. Then he threw himself out over the mountainside. A roaring sound was heard around them and Ermine thought his last hour had come. But this lasted only a moment; then the eagle halted and bade him open his eyes. They were again at the place where they had met. They had become friends and now they must part, and they bade each other a cordial farewell. Ermine hastened home to his parents and related all his adventures to them, and he concluded with these words:
"Men are lonely; they live without joy because they don't know how to make merry. Now the eagle has given me the blessed gift of rejoicing, and I have promised to invite all men to share in the gift."
Father and mother listened in surprise to the son's tale and shook their heads incredulously, for he who has never felt his blood glow and his heart throb in exultation cannot imagine such a gift as the eagle's. But the old people dared not gainsay him, for the eagle had already taken two of their sons, and they understood that its word had to be obeyed if they were to keep this last child. So they did all that the eagle had required of them.
A feast hall, matching the eagle's, was built, and the larder was filled with the meat of sea creatures and caribou. Father and son combined joyous words, describing their dearest and deepest memories in songs which they set to music; also they made drums, rumbling tambourines of taut caribou hides with round wooden frames; and to the rhythm of the drum beats that accompanied the songs they moved their arms and legs in frolicsome hops and lively antics. Thus they grew warm both in mind and body, and began to regard everything about them in quite a new light. Many an evening it would happen that they joked and laughed, flippant and full of fun, at a time when they would otherwise have snored with sheer boredom the whole evening through.
As soon as all the preparations were made, Ermine went out to invite people to the festival that was to be held. To his great surprise he discovered that he and his parents were no longer alone as before. Suddenly he met people everywhere, always in couples, strange looking people, some clad in wolf skins, others in the fur of the wolverine, the lynx, the red fox, the silver fox, the cross fox--in fact, in the skins of all kinds of animals. Ermine invited them to the banquet in his new feast hall and they all followed him joyfully. Then they held their song festival, each producing his own songs. There were laughter, talk, and sound, and people were carefree and happy as they had never been before. The table delicacies were appreciated, gifts of meat were exchanged, friendships were formed, and there were several who gave each other costly gifts of fur. The night passed, and not till the morning light shone into the feast hall did the guests take their leave. Then, as they thronged out of the corridor, they all fell forward on their hands and sprang away on all fours. They were no longer men but had changed into wolves, wolverines, lynxes, silver foxes, red foxes--in fact, into all the beasts of the forest. They were the guests that the old eagle had sent, so that father and son might not seek in vain. Thus animals, who have always been more lighthearted than men, were man's first guests in a feast hall.