Showing posts with label Week 11. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Week 11. Show all posts

Friday, April 6, 2018

Week 11 Story: A Den of Snakes


Once, there lived a boy. He lived a peaceful life with his grandmother and family in the village. He would often go into the woods, hunting birds and bringing them back to feed himself and his grandmother.

The rest of his family was jealous, for he did not share the birds with them. The rest of the village was jealous, for he would not teach others how to hunt the birds as well as him.

The boy's family and his village treated him cruelly. They never caused his body harm, but instead wore him down with cutting words. Despite his love and loyalty for his grandmother, the boy's mind slowly sunk further and further into anguish.

When she learned of what was happening, the grandmother was furious. She threatened all the villagers and her family, telling them that if they continued to act as deceitful snakes, then it would be their fate to turn into snakes.

They laughed at her, and refused to stop.

At last, the boy broke. He left, wandering into the forest and straight into the river. The villagers were smug, and the boy's family celebrated. 'This selfish boy is now gone from our lives,' they cheered.

But then.

From the river that the boy had walked into, a giant snake emerged. It slithered its way to the center of the village, leaving a trail in its wake. Horrified yet curious, the boy's family and the rest of the villagers gathered to watch from what they believed to be a safe distance.

However, the boy's grandmother walked past them all, moving right up to the snake, and greeted him warmly. It took the villagers many moments to realize, but the snake was the boy transformed.

The enormous snake - the boy they had driven out - turned his eyes onto the villagers and his family. He let out a hiss, and all who heard it would swear that they heard a single word in it: 'suffer.'

And they did. A sudden pain came onto each and every member of the village but one, and they writhed as their bodies transformed. From the feet up, they slowly changed into snakes, the agony only increasing the longer this transformation went on.

By the end, every person in the village, the boy's family included, had become a snake, and they mindlessly slithered about on the ground.

The boy's grandmother had not been saved from this fate. However, her change had been free of pain, and so her mind was untouched. Turning her new head to face the boy-turned-snake, the grandmother wrapped her new body around his in a hug. Together, they left the snake-filled village and went to the river.

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Author's Note:

In "The Snake Boy", a boy is treated horribly by his family until he leaves. When he returns, he transforms into a snake and goes into the river. His grandmother grieves until the family's horrible treatment of her drivers her to walk into the river as well.

In "The Snake Man", two hunters go into the woods and one breaks a taboo about eating squirrels, where the price is transforming into a snake, which then happens to him.

I tried to combine these two stories into one, with the boy turning into a snake after he first leaves the village. When he returns, the grandmother's words - that the villagers acting like deceitful snakes would result in them becoming snakes - come true. The boy-turned-snake's gaze transforms everyone into snakes, but the grandmother is the only one who retains her human mind through the transformation.

Bibliography: "The Snake Boy" and "The Snake Man" from Myths of the Cherokee by James Mooney. Web Source.

Image:  Dangerous Cobra by Peka on Pixabay. Web Source.

Wednesday, April 4, 2018

Reading Notes B Week 11: The Snake Boy & The Snake Man

  • Snake Boy
    • Boy who went bird hunting every day and brought birds back to grandmother
    • Family was jealous
      • of Grandma for getting birds brought to her? of Boy for grandmother's affections?
    • Family treated boy so bad that he told grandma he would leave
    • Left without eating breakfast and returned in the evening with a pair of deer horns
    • Told grandma he had to be alone in the hothouse, so she left to go into the house with the others
    • Grandma came back at daybreak and saw a massive snake with horns on its head with two human legs in place of a tail
    • Boy told her to leave, and crawled out (long period of time) of the hothouse.
    • Crawled through settlement leaving a trail until it reached the river and went in
    • Grandmother grieved despite boy having told her not to grieve for him
    • Family got upset, told her that if she thought so much of him she should go join him
    • Grandmother follows trail and walks into river
    • Once afterward, man sees her sitting on a rock in the river, but she jumps in the water as soon as she sees him
  • Snake Man
    • Two hunters under a taboo not to eat squirrel or turkey
    • Go into woods, light a fire to prepare supper once evening comes
    • One killed several squirrels during day and prepared to eat them
    • Other warned him not to break taboo or he'd turn into a snake
    • Hunter ignored warning and ate squirrels
    • Later in the night, hunter was rolling around in agony with his lower body having turned into the body and tail of a water snake
    • Other hunter could not help, and could only watch as first hunter slowly turned into a snake
    • Snake hunter finished turning into snake and crawled into river


Bibliography: "The Snake Boy" and "The Snake Man" from Myths of the Cherokee by James Mooney. Web Source.

Image: Mississippi Green Water Snake by John Sullivan on Wikimedia Commons. Web Source.

Reading Notes A Week 11: The First Fire

  • World was cold in the beginning
  • The Thunders sent lighting and created a fire in the bottom of a hollow sycamore tree on an island
  • Animals saw smoke and knew the fire was there, could not reach because of water
  • Animals wanted to go after fire
    • Raven flew to the sycamore tree, but the heat scorched his feathers black and he retreated
    • Screech-owl went but nearly got eyes burned out, eyes got turned red
    • Hooting Owl and Horned Owl got white rings about their eyes from the ashes
    • Uksu'hï snake (black racer) went through the water and a small hole at bottom of tree, but got scorched black by the hot ashes and from then on had the habit of doubling back on his tracks "as if trying to escape from close quarters"
    • Gûle'gï ("The Climber") swam over and climbed the outside of the tree, but fell in when smoke choked him and also turned black
  • Animals held another council but all were afraid of the burning tree
  • Känäne'skï Amai'yëhï (Water Spider) volunteered
  • She wove a tusti bowl and carried it to the island, and put a coal of fire into the bowl
  • Water Spider brought back the coal and brought the world fire

Bibliography: The First Fire from Myths of the Cherokee by James Mooney. Web Source.

Image:  Ring of Fire from pixabay by geralt. Web Source.