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diff --git a/16093-8.txt b/16093-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e6ec5f1 --- /dev/null +++ b/16093-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,5520 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Eternal Maiden, by T. Everett Harré + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: The Eternal Maiden + + +Author: T. Everett Harré + + + +Release Date: June 20, 2005 [eBook #16093] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ETERNAL MAIDEN*** + + +E-text prepared by Al Haines + + + +THE ETERNAL MAIDEN + +A Novel + +by + +T. EVERETT HARRÉ + +Published by +Mitchell Kennerley +New York + +Press of J. J. Little & Ives Company +East Twenty-fourth Street +New York + +1913 + + + + + + + +TO + +EDGAR WILSON RIDDELL + +JANUARY 31, 1892--JULY 2, 1912 + + +IN MEMORY OF + +A LIFE'S SUPREME FRIENDSHIP + + + + +THE ETERNAL MAIDEN + +PRELUDE + +_Long ages ago, darkness brooded over the frozen world and held in its +thrall the unreleased waters of the glacial seas. There was no animal +life upon the land, and in the depth of the waters no living thing +stirred. Kokoyah, the water god, breathed not; Tornahhuchsuah, the +earth spirit, who rules above the spirits of the wind and air, was +veiled in slumber. Men had risen like willows from the frozen earth; +but, although they lived, they were as the dead. They spake not, +neither did they hunt, nor eat, nor did they die. Then the Great +Spirit, whose name is not known, placed upon earth a man, in his arms +the strength to kill, in his heart the primal urge of love. And in +that flowerless arctic Eden, out of its bounteous compassion, the Great +Spirit placed also a maiden, her face beautiful with the young +virginity of the world, in her bosom implanted a yearning, not unmixed +with fear, for love. Gazing upon her, the youth's heart stirred, with +desire, the maiden's with virginal terror. The maiden fled, the youth +followed. Over the desolate icy mountains the fleet feet of the youth +sped with the swiftness of the wind gods, over the silent white seas +the maiden with the elusiveness of the air spirits. In the heart of +the youth throbbed the passion of love, indomitable, eternal, which the +blasting breath of time should never kill. In the maiden's bosom +quaked a reasonless shame, an unconquerable terror. Surrounded by her +whirling cloud of hair, the maiden sprang, untiring, across the wild +white world. His strength failing, the youth pantingly followed. +Thousands of years passed; the breathless pursuit continued; the +maiden's nebulous hair became shot with streaks of golden fire, from +her eyes beams of light streamed across the expanses over which she +exultantly, fearfully bounded; the tremulous faltering youth's face +paled until it shone silvery in the darkness, and the beads of +perspiration on his forehead glowed with a strange lustre. Reaching, +in their mad race, the very edge of the earth, the maiden leaped, +fiery, into space, and her hair becoming suddenly molten, she became +the sun--the eternal maiden Sukh-eh-nukh, the beautiful, the +all-desired. Utterly exhausted, his wan arms yearningly outstretched, +the youth swooned after her into the heavens, and was transformed into +the moon--the ever-desiring, ever-sorrowing moon. In the smile of +Sukh-eh-nukh the seas melted. Walrus and narwhals, seals and whales +came into being on the bosom of Kokoyah; on the earth the snows +disappeared, and the brow of Tornahhuchsuah was crowned with green +grasses and starry flowers. Men hunted game, women laughed for joy; +they beat drums, they danced, they sang. By the eternal, unrequited +passion of the lovers in the skies, happiness and plenty came upon the +earth. But, with Light, came also Death. Jealous of men's happiness, +Perdlugssuaq, the Great Evil, brought sickness; he struck men on the +hunt, on the seas, in the mountains. He was ever feared. He made the +Great Dark terrible. But when the night became bright with the +love-lorn glamour of the moon, Perdlugssuaq was for the time forgotten; +in their hearts men felt a vague, tender, and ineffable stirring--the +lure of a passion stronger and stranger even than death. They gazed +upon the moon with instinctive, undefined pity. So, as the years +passed, and ages melted and remade the snows, the long day was golden +with the Beauty that is ever desired, the Ideal never attained; the +night was softly silver with the melancholy and eternal hope of the +deathless love that eternally desires, eternally pursues, and is +eternally denied._ + +Thus runs the Eskimo legend. + + + + +I + +"_Her cheeks were flushed delicately with the soft pink of the lichen +flowers that bloom in the rare days of early summer. Her eyes played +with a light as elusive, as quick as the golden radiance on the seas._" + + +Great excitement prevailed among the members of the tribe. Along a +mottled green-and-brown stretch of shore, which rolled undulatingly +toward the icy fringe of the polar sea, more than twoscore hunters were +engaged in unusual activity. Some were lacing tight over the framework +the taut skin of their kayaks. Others sharpened harpoon points with +bits of flint. Tateraq busily cut long lashings from tanned walrus +hides. Maisanguaq deftly took these and pieced them together into long +lines, which were rolled in coils lasso-fashion. Arnaluk and a half +dozen others sat on their haunches, between their knees great balls +made of the entire hides of seals. With cheeks extended they blew into +these with gusto. Filled with air, the hides became floats, which were +attached to the leather lasso lines. The lines in turn were fastened +by Attalaq and Papik to harpoons, which were to be driven into the +walrus, the natives' chief prey of the arctic sea. + +A babel of conversation swayed to and fro among this northernmost +fringe of the human race. Now and then it was drowned in the raucous, +deafening shriek of auks which swarmed from nearby cliffs and soared in +clouds over the shore. + +"_Aveq soah_! Walrus! Walrus!" shouted Papik, tossing up his arms and +dancing, his brown face twisting with grotesque grimaces of joy. + +"_Aveq soah! Aveq soah_!" He leaped in frenzy. He seized his harpoon +in mimicry of striking, and darted it up and down in the air. "Walrus! +Walrus!" he cried, and his feverish contagion spread through the crowd. + +"_Aveq tedicksoah_! A great many walrus," echoed Arnaluk. "_Aveq +tedicksoah_! Walrus too many to count!" + +They stopped their work and gathered in a group, Papik before them, his +arms pointing toward the sea. His eyes glistened. + +To the south, _Im-nag-i-na_, the entrance to the polar sea, was hidden +by grayish mists which, as they shifted across the sun, palpitated with +running streaks of gold. From the veiled distance the sound of a +glacier exploding pealed over the waters like the muffled roar of +artillery. The sun, magnified into a great swimming disc by the rising +vapors, poured a rich and colorful light over the sea--it was a light +without warmth. In the turquoise sky overhead, the moving clouds +changed in hue from crimson to silver, and straggling flecks, like +diaphanous ribbons, became stained with mottled dyes. Against the +horizon, the arctic armada of eternally moving icebergs drifted slowly +southward and, like the spectral ships of the long dead Norsemen who +had braved these regions, flaunted the semblance of silver-gleaming +sails. The sea rose in great green emerald swells, the wave crests +broke in seething curls of silver foam, and in the troughs of +descending waters glittered cascades of celestial jewels. It was late +summer--the hour, midnight. + +The keen eyes of the natives searched the seas. + +To the south of where the watchers were gathered, the glacial heels of +the inland mountains step precipitously into the sea and rise to a +height of several thousand feet. At the base of these iron rocks, +corroded with the rust of interminable ages, the fragments of great +floes, like catapults, are tossed by the inrushing sea. Above, in +summertime, rises and falls constantly a black mist resembling shifting +cloud smoke. Millions of auks swarm from their moss-ensconced grottos; +an oppressive clamor beats the air. Along the ocean, where crevices of +the descending iron-chiselled cliffs are fugitively green with ribbons +of pale grass, downy-winged ducks purr, mating guillemots coo +incessantly, and tremulous oogzooks chirrup joyously to their young. + +As the natives listened, a deep nasal bellowing from the far ocean +trembled in the air. + +Not a man stirred. The sound vibrated into silence. The auks +screamed. Hawks shrilled. From the far interior valleys came the +echoed wolf-howling of Eskimo dogs. There the mountain tops, +perpetually covered with ice and snow, gleamed through the clouds with +running colors of amaranth, green and mottled gold. The air swam with +frigid fire. As the tribe stood in silence along the shore, a roar as +of gatling guns pealed from the mist-hidden heights. After a taut +moment of silence, a frightened scream rose from every living thing on +land and sea. Yet the group of men only bent their heads. Then, like +an undertone in the chorus of animate life, their quick ears detected +the long-drawn, hoarse call of walrus bulls. The howls of the dogs +from the distant mountain passes came nearer. More distant receded the +stertorous nasal bellow on the sea. + +The natives feverishly leaped to their tasks. There was a note of +anxiety in their voices. Onto the forepart of the kayaks they placed +their weapons, leather lines, floats and drags. More than twoscore +boats were drawn over the land-adhering ice to the edge of the sea. A +fierce chatter brought all the women to the doors of their seal-skin +tents. They looked seaward and shook their heads with dismay. + +"Many walrus--far away," the men shouted. + +"No, no," the timid women returned. "Walrus too far +away--_Perdlugssuaq will strike you there_!" + +Against the distant horizon mighty bergs loomed. In swift eddies of +water great floes swirled. The walrus were too far away to be seen. +Yet the opportunity of securing walrus was too rare to be missed; for +unless food and fuel were soon secured, starvation during the coming +winter confronted the tribe. The previous winter had been one of +unprecedented severity and had wiped out bears, and herds of caribou +and musk oxen. The summer season, which was now drawing to a close, +had been destitute of every kind of game. Musk oxen had been seldom +found and then only in the far inland valleys. Some blight of nature +seemed to have exterminated even the animals of the sea. The natives +had lived mainly on the teeming bird life. From the scrawny bodies of +the arctic birds, however, neither food that could be preserved nor +fuel to be burned in the lamps could be secured. On musk oxen the +tribes depend chiefly for hides and meat, and on walrus for both food +and fuel. The ammunition, brought by Danish traders the summer before, +was exhausted, so in the hunt they had for many sleeps to rely solely +upon their skill with their own primitive weapons. For months the +doughty hunters had gathered but few supplies. The prospect of the +coming winter was ominous indeed. Wandering up and down the coast in +their migrating excursions the tribes had scoured land and sea with but +meagre results. At the village from which they now heard the inspiring +walrus calls, a dozen visiting tribesmen--most of them in search for +wives as well as game--had gathered. Joy filled them in the prospect +of securing supplies--and possible success in love--at last. + +As they launched their kayaks, in impatient haste lest the walrus drift +too far seaward, some one called: + +"Ootah! Ootah!" + +They gazed anxiously about. Ootah, the bravest and most distinguished +of the hunters, was missing. All the young men would gladly have +started without Ootah, but the elders, who knew his skill and the might +of his arm, were not willing. + +To the younger men there was an added zest in the hunt; each felt in +the other a rival, and Ootah the one most to be feared. A feverish +anxiety, a burning desire to distinguish himself flushed the heart of +each brave hunter. For whoever brought back the most game, so they +believed, stood the best chance of winning the hand of Annadoah. Of +all the unmarried maidens of the tribes, none cooked so well, none +could sew so well as Annadoah, none was so skilled in the art of making +_ahttees_ and _kamiks_ as Annadoah. And, moreover, Annadoah was very +fair. + +"Ootah! _aveq soah_! Hasten thou! The walrus are drifting to sea." + +Attalaq rushed up to the village and paused at the tent of Annadoah. + +"Ootah!" he called. + +A voice from within replied. + +"We start--the wind drifts--the walrus are carried to sea." + +"I come!" replied Ootah. + +The flap of the tent opened. The sunlight poured upon the face of the +young hunter. He smiled radiantly, with the self-assertion of youth, +the joy of life. + +Ootah was graced with unwonted beauty. He was slight and agile of +limb; his body was supple and lithe; his face was immobile, beardless, +and with curving lips vividly red, a nose, small, with nostrils +dilating sensitively, and eyebrows heavily lashed, it possessed +something of the softness of a woman. His glistening black hair, bound +about his forehead by a narrow fillet of skins, fell riotously over his +shoulders. His eyes were large and dark and swam with an ardent light. + +He turned. + +"Thou wilt not place thy face to mine, Annadoah? Yet I love thee, +Annadoah. My heart melts as streams in springtime, Annadoah. My arms +grow strong as the wind, and my hand swift as an arrow for love of +thee, Annadoah. The joy the sight of thee gives me is greater than +that of food after starving in the long winter! Yea, thou wilt be +mine? Surely for my heart bursts for love of thee, Annadoah." + +He leaned back, stretching his arms, but Annadoah shyly drew further +inside her shelter. + +With a sigh he flung his leather line over his shoulder, seized his +harpoons, and stepped from the tent. His step was resilient and +buoyant, his slim body moved with the grace of an arctic deer. He +looked back as he reached the icy shore. Annadoah stood at the door of +her tent. Her parting laughter rang after him with the sweetness of +buntings singing in spring. + +Ootah's heart leaped within him. Annadoah possessed a beauty rare +among her people. From her father, one of the brave white men who had +died with the Greely party years before at Cape Sabine, Annadoah had +inherited a delicacy and beauty more common indeed with the unknown +peoples of the south. Her face was fresh and smooth, and of a pale +golden hue. Her cheeks were flushed delicately with the soft pink of +the lichen flowers that bloom in the rare days of early summer. Her +eyes played with a light as elusive, as quick as the golden radiance on +the seas. Her dark silken hair straggled luxuriantly from under the +loose hood of immaculate white fox fur which had fallen back from her +head. The soft skins of blue foxes and of young birds clothed her. +From her sleeves her hands peeped; they were small, dainty, childlike. +Almost childlike, too, was her face, so palely golden, so fresh, so +lovely, so petite. There were mingled in her the coyness of a child +and the irresistible coquetry of a woman. + +She waved her hands joyously to the hunters leaving the shore. They +called back to her. Some of the women frowned. One shook her fist at +Annadoah. + +Papik, lingering behind, approached Annadoah timidly. + +"Thou art beautiful, Annadoah; thou canst sew with great skill. With +the needles the white men brought thee, thou hast made garments such as +no other maiden. Papik would wed thee, Annadoah." + +"Thou art a good lad, Papik," Annadoah replied, laughing gaily. "But +thy fingers are very long--and long, indeed, thy nose!" + +Papik flushed, for to him this was a tragedy. + +"But with my fingers I speed the arrow with skill," he replied. + +"True, but the fate of him who shoots with a skill such as thine is +unfortunate indeed; for soon the day will come when thou wilt not speed +the arrow, when thy hands will be robbed of their cunning. When +_ookiah_ (winter) comes with his lashes of frost he will smite thy +fingers--they will fall off. Then how wilt thou get food for thy wife? +_Ookiah_ will twist thy nose, and it will freeze. Poor Papik!" + +Annadoah lay her hand gently on his arm, and a brief sorrow clouded her +smiles. + +Papik bowed his head. He understood the blight nature had set upon him +and it made his heart cold. Truly his fingers were long and his nose +was long--and either was a misfortune to a tribesman. He knew, as all +the natives knew, that sooner or later during a long winter his fingers +would inevitably freeze, then he would lose his skill with weapons; +consequently he would not be able to provide for a wife. His nose, +too, in all probability would freeze; then he would be disfigured and +the trials of life would be more complicated. + +From the inherited experience of ages the natives know that a hunter +with short hands and feet is most likely to live long; a man's length +of life can be pretty accurately gauged by the stubbiness of his nose. +The degree of radiation of the human body is such that it can prevent +freezing in this northern region only when the extremities are short; +thus a man with long feet is almost for a certainty doomed to lose his +toes, and the most fortunate is he whose feet and hands are short, +whose nose is stubby and whose ears are small. The exigencies of life +place an economic value on the structure of a hunter's body, and the +little Eskimo women--endowed with a crude social conscience which +demands that a father shall live and remain efficient so as to care for +his own children--are loath to marry one afflicted as was Papik. + +"But I care for thee, Annadoah," Papik protested. + +"And well do I know thou art a brave lad, but seek thou another maiden; +thou dost not touch my heart, Papik, and thy fingers are very, very +long." + +With native spontaneity, Papik laughed and turned shoreward. As he +passed the assembled maidens he paused momentarily and greeted them. +He made a brief proposal of marriage to Ahningnetty, a fat maiden, and +was met with laughter. + +"Go on, Long Fingers," one called. "How wilt thou strike the bear when +thy fingers are gone? How wilt thou seek the musk ox when _ookiah_ +hath bitten off thy feet?" + +The maiden who spoke was extremely thin. + +"Ha, ha!" Papik returned. "How wilt thou warm thy husband when the +winter comes? How wilt thou warm the little baby when thou art like +the bear after a famished winter, thou maid of skin and bones!" + +"Long-nose! Long-nose! may thy nose freeze!" she called. + +The other maidens laughed and gibed at her. In anger she fled into her +_tupik_, or tent. Being very thin she, too, like Papik, suffered from +the bar sinister of nature. For, in selecting a wife, a native comes +down to the practical consideration of choosing a maid who will likely +grow fat, so that, during the long cold winters, her body will be a +sort of human radiator to keep the husband and children warm. So love, +you see, in this region, is largely influenced by an instinctive +knowledge of natural economies. + +As he launched his kayak, Ootah turned toward Annadoah. + +"Thou art the sun, Annadoah!" he called. + +"And thou the moon, Ootah," she replied. "I shall await thee, Ootah! +Bring thou back fat and blubber, Ootah, to warm thy fires, Ootah." And +she laughed gaily. Then she turned her back to Ootah, bent her head +coyly and did not turn around again. To Ootah this was a good +augury--for when a maiden turns her back upon a suitor she thinks +favorably of him. This is the custom. + +Ootah felt a new strength in his veins. He felt himself master of all +the prey in the sea. + + +At the entrance of the tent of Sipsu, the _angakoq_, or native +magician, stood Maisanguaq, one of the rivals for the hand of Annadoah. +His face twisted with jealous rage as he heard Annadoah calling to the +speeding Ootah. His narrow eyes glittered vindictively. Turning on +his heel he entered Sipsu's dwelling place. + +Sipsu sat on the floor near his oil lamp. When Maisanguaq entered he +did not stir. He was as still, as grotesque, as evil-looking as the +tortured idols of the Chinese; like theirs his eyes were beadlike, +expressionless, dull; such are the eyes of dead seal. His face was +brown and cracked like old leather, and was covered with a crust of +dirt; his gray-streaked hair was matted and straggled over his face; it +teemed with lice. He held his knotty hands motionless over the flame +of his lamp. His nails were long and curled like sharp talons. As +Maisanguaq saw him he could not repress a shudder. + +Sipsu was feared, and as correspondingly hated, by the tribe. They +brought to him, it is true, offerings of musk ox meat and walrus +blubber when members fell ill. But that was the urge of necessity. Of +late years Sipsu's conjurations for recovery had resulted in few cures; +his heart was not in them; but with greater vehemence did he enter upon +seances of malediction. With almost unerring exactness he prophesied +many deaths. For this the tribe did not love him. Nor did Sipsu love +the tribe; especially did he hate the youthful, and those who courted +and were newly wed. When Maisanguaq touched his shoulder, he turned +with a growl. + +"Canst thou invoke the curse of death upon one who goes hunting upon +the seas?" + +Through the rheum of years Sipsu's eyes gleamed. + +The aged, gnarled thing found voice. It was hollow and thin. + +"Ha, thou art Maisanguaq," his toothless jaws chattered. "Thou bearest +no one good will. Seldom dost thou smile. For this I like thee." + +He laughed harshly. Maisanguaq impatiently repeated his question: + +"Can Sipsu invoke the great curse? Ha, what dost thou mean? Art thou +a fool? Have not many died upon the word of Sipsu, Sipsu whose spirits +never desert him! Harken! Did not Sipsu go unto the mountains in his +youth? Did he not hear the hill spirits speaking? Did he not carry +food to them, and wood and arrow points for weapons? And in _ookiah_ +(winter) did they not strike? Did they not kill one Otaq, who hated +Sipsu? Did Sipsu not go unto the lower land of the dead--did he not +speak to those who freeze in the dark? Yea, did Sipsu not learn how +the world is kept up, and the souls of nature are bound together? And +hath he not the power to separate them, yea, as a man from his shadow?" + +"Thou evil-tongued wretch, well doth Maisanguaq believe thee! Here--I +promise thee meat. I follow Ootah upon the chase. There are walrus on +the sea. Invoke the curse of destruction upon Ootah--and I will give +thee meat for the long winter." + +"Ootah--Ootah--yah--hah! Ootah!" Sipsu snapped the name viciously. +"With joy shall I bring the great evil unto Ootah. For hath he not +despised my art, hath he not scoffed at my spirits! But thou--what +reason hast thou to desire his death?" + +"Ootah findeth favor with Annadoah," said Maisanguaq briefly. "I would +she never make his _kamiks_ (boots)." + +"Yea, and she shall not. She shall not!" the old man shrieked in a +sudden access of rage. "So saith Sipsu, whose spirits never fail." + +Lying on the floor Sipsu closed his eyes and, moving his head up and +down, called repeatedly: + +"_Quilaka Nauk_! _Quilaka Nauk_! Where are my spirits? Where are my +spirits?" + +Presently he rose, and swaying his body crooned: + +"_Tassa quilivagit_! _Tassa quilivagit_! My spirits are here--they +are here! _Tassa quilivagit_!" + +Grasping a drum made of animal tissue strung over a rib-bone he began +to dance. He beat a slow, uneasy measure on the drum. His face +grinned hideously. His voice at times rose to a harsh shriek, then +suddenly it trailed away until it seemed like the voice of one speaking +very far off. In a curious sort of intermittent crooning and shrieking +ventriloquism he called down curses upon Ootah. His dance increased; +he beat the drum frenziedly. His legs twisted under him, he described +short running circles and jumped up and down in accesses of hysteria. +His scraggy arms, with their tattered clothes, writhed in the air as he +beat the drum above him. His head began to nod from side to side; his +eyes glowed like coals; his tongue hung from his mouth; foam gathered +at his lips. + +"Ootah! Ootah! May his _kaneg_ (head) swell with the great fire! May +he see horrors that do not exist--what the wicked dead dream in their +frigid hell! May the wrath of the spirits descend upon him! May the +wrath of the spirits descend upon him!" + +Sipsu uttered short howls. Maisanguaq joined in the incantation, and +re-echoed the blighting curses. + +"May he suffer from _kangerdlugpoq_ (terrible body pains). May they +end not! May he lie awake forever! May he never sleep! May his teeth +chatter during the great dark!" + +Sipsu groaned. He worked himself into an ecstasy of torture. His form +became a black whirling figure in the dim tent. + +"May Ootah's eyes close, may the lids swell; may they burn with fire." + +"May he never see the light of day--may he never aim the arrow--may his +harpoons strike forever in the darkness!" Maisanguaq replied +rancorously. "May the wrath of the spirits descend upon him!" + +"May Ootah's tongue fasten to his mouth--may it be as the tongues of +dead _ahmingmah_ (musk oxen)," chanted Sipsu. "May he never speak--may +Annadoah never hear his voice," chorused Maisanguaq. + +"May Ootah lose his _pungo_ (dogs); may they all die!" + +Maisanguaq, caught by the evil contagion, began to sway his body in +rhythm to the weird dance. + +"May Ootah become a cripple! May he break his bones! May he lie +helpless for years! May his shadow leave him! May he suffer with the +greatest of all pains!" + +As he uttered this terrible curse, desiring that Ootah's shadow, +wherein exists the soul, might depart from his still-living body, and +thus cause the most excruciating bodily anguish, Sipsu sank exhausted +to the ground. He writhed in a paroxysm. + +"May Ootah die slowly; may his legs die, may his hands die--yea, may +the spirits of his body be severed from one another as ice fields in +the breaking; may the spirit of his hands, the spirit of his feet, the +spirit of his lungs, the spirit of his head, the spirit of his heart +wander apart--may they be torn asunder as the clouds in a storm! May +they wander apart forever seeking and may they never find themselves! +May Ootah suffer as never suffered the unhappy dead!" + +And Maisanguaq's deep voice growled hatefully: + +"May Ootah's body lie unburied! May he rot upon the earth! May the +ravens peck out his eyes! May a murderer drink his blood! May the +wolves eat his heart! May the spirit of the fog grow fat upon his +entrails! And may the spirits of his body scatter--as the clouds in +the wild _anore_ (winds) scatter! May his soul forever seek to find +its kindred spirits unavailingly and suffer in _Sila_, (throughout the +universe) forever!" + +From under a pile of skins Sipsu, his chant subsiding, brought forth a +bundle. Opening it, he revealed a collection of old bones; there were +the bones of musk oxen, seals, walrus and smaller animals. + +"Yah-hah-hah! I shall create a _tupilak_!" he crooned vindictively. +"I shall create a _tupilak_! And from the depths of the waters the +_tupilak_ shall see Ootah. Yah-hah-hah! I shall create a _tupilak_, +and from the hands of Sipsu it shall carry destruction to Ootah on the +sea. Yah-hah-hah!" He laughed crazily. Continuing his chant he +constructed of the bones a crude likeness to an animal skeleton. Over +this he sprinkled a handful of dried turf. Then, from beneath the +cover of his bed he brought a stone pot and from it poured a sluggish +red liquid over the strange object of his creation. This was a mixture +of clotted animal blood and water kept for such purposes of +conjuration. This done, he threw over the bones an aged sealskin. +Then he rose to his feet, and in a low voice uttered the secret +formulas whereby, in the depths of the sea, the result of his labor +should take the form of an artificial walrus. + +Maisanguaq stood by, silent, evil exultation shining in his eyes. + +While the Sipsu was moaning his spell over the pile of bones, +Maisanguaq turned and left the tent. Out on the sea he saw the kayaks +of his departing companions. + +"Good luck, Maisanguaq, have courage in the chase! Remember Annadoah +awaits you all!" Annadoah called blithely and coquettishly after him. + +Maisanguaq's lips tightened, his heart leaped, but well he knew that he +meant nothing to the maiden, well he knew what little chance he had, +and envy filled him, and bitter doubt, for he knew Ootah's prowess, his +strength of limb, and braveness of heart. However, he put out with +quick powerful strokes, and with a sense of anticipated triumph, for he +was confident that the magician by his necromancy had created in the +depths of the sea a _tupilak_, or artificial walrus, which should +attack Ootah. He knew it might upset Ootah's kayak and cause him to be +drowned. The probabilities were, however, that it would permit itself +to be harpooned, in which case its blighting curse would fall upon +Ootah, who would lose all power and strength of limb, whose body would +become bent and crippled and racked with the _kangerdlugpoq_, and who +would die slowly, inch by inch. Thus, Ootah would be helpless the rest +of his days and as he died all the dreadful horrors of the curses would +come upon him. Thus would Maisanguaq be revenged. + +As the midnight sun dipped below the horizon, the sea became more +deeply golden. To the women watching along the shore, the multitude of +kayaks became mere black specks. They disappeared now and then behind +the crests of leaping waves, and reappearing moved with the swiftness +of birds along the horizon. + +At the entrance of her tent Annadoah stood, one hand shading her eyes +as they pierced the radiant distance. From the mountain passes behind +the village echoed the joyous howls of approaching dogs. Something +stirred in the heart of Annadoah--something fluttered there like the +wings of a frightened bird. + + +Ootah's paddle touched the water with the softness of a feather, yet so +quickly that the double blades emitted constant flashes of light +intermittently on either side. His arms moved with consummate ease. +His kayak made a dark blurred line as it sped forward over the yellow +waters. Soon he had outdistanced the party. Then his speed slackened, +he glanced behind. + +The other kayaks darted after him like erratic bugs. The land was a +mere curve on the horizon; all about him the sea rose and fell, and +from the shimmering mirror of every wave the sunlight shot backward in +various directions. A thousand golden searchlights seemed playing over +the sea. Now and then through the coppery mists an emerald green berg +loomed titanically, and as it slowly bore down upon him, Ootah would +gracefully manipulate one end of his paddle and shift his kayak about +while the berg lurched toweringly onward. As he gained distance from +the land the ocean swelled with increasing volume. His frail skin +kayak was lifted high on the oily crests of waves, and as it descended +with swift rushes, Ootah felt exultant thrills in his heart. Far away +he heard the resounding explosion of ice bergs colliding. A low bellow +arose from a floe immediately ahead. Ootah's blood leaped, the spirit +of the hunter throbbed in his veins, his nostrils sensitively quivered. +With a slow silent movement of the paddle, he prevented his kayak from +going too great a distance forward in order to await the others. +Judging by the sound of the muffled bellowing, he assumed that the +great animals were sunning themselves on the southern ridge of the +floe. His tactics were to paddle about to the north, land on the floe, +and descend upon the walrus from the protection of the ridges of +crushed ice which always abound on these rafts of the arctic sea. + +While he retarded the kayak and played with his paddle, Ootah became +conscious of disquieting things in the world about him. + +In the heavens he saw low lying clouds moving slowly southward. Higher +above, clouds moved more swiftly in another direction. + +"The _quilanialeqisut_ (air spirits) are not at rest," murmured Ootah. +"O spirits of the air, what disturbs your ease?" + +The clouds in the higher ether circled as if in an eddy of wind. +Certainly the spirits were not at peace among themselves. + +"Spirits of the air," spake Ootah, "waft your caresses to Annadoah's +cheeks. Tell her Ootah waits to kill the walrus, that Ootah loves her +and would make Annadoah his wife--_neuilacto_ Annadoah; tell Annadoah +Ootah presses his nose to hers and calls her _Mamacadosa_ (of all +things that which tastes the most delightful)." + +A gust swept the clouds from the zenith. Still no breath of air +touched the sea. + +To the lee a group of small icebergs passed. They rocked and eddied, +and from their glacial sides the light poured in changing colors. + +"O spirit of the light, carry thy bright message to the eyes of +Annadoah, tell her Ootah has loved her for many, many moons." + +The bergs crashed into one another, and in the impact sank into the sea. + +Ootah bit his lips. A vague misgiving was cold within his heart. + +A flock of gulls passed low over the waters. + +He called to them--that they should take his love to Annadoah. They +were to tell Annadoah that he would soon return, laden with food and +fuel for the winter. Their raucous cries mocked him. He demanded what +they meant. "Ootah--Ootah," they seemed to call, "how foolish art +thou, Ootah, how foolish art thou to love Annadoah. For fickle is +Annadoah--fickle, fickle the heart of the maiden Annadoah!" + +Ootah shrieked an enraged defiance. His eyes sought the horizon. +_Kokoyah_, the sea god, was breathing deeply, and in the mists which +rose like fire-shot smoke before the sun, singular forms took shape. +Ootah saw the magnified shadows of great dogs. They seemed to be +dashing along the horizon. Then, with crushing strides, behind the +adumbration a great sled, a titan figure gathered substance in the +clouds. It moved with terrific speed; it dominated the sky. Its dress +was not that of the northern tribes. Ootah felt a resentful stirring, +as, looking upward, in the clouds overhead, a white face, hard, fierce, +scowling, with burning blue eyes, momentarily appeared. + +"A white warrior from the south," Ootah murmured. "And he comes with +swift tread. What can it mean?" + +In common with many primitive peoples, Ootah possessed the soul of a +poet--nature was vocal with him, and the disembodied beings of other +worlds made themselves manifest and spoke in the light and in the +clouds. To him everything lived; the clouds were the habitation of +spirits, the waves were alive, all the animals and fish possessed +souls; the very winds were endowed with sex functions and loved and +quarreled among themselves. The interrelation of man and the forces of +the universe were inseparably intimate and familiar; integral parts of +one another, their destinies were bound together. And to Ootah nature +found much to gossip about in the affairs of men. + +Eagerly Ootah sought the clouds. Along the horizon they resolved +themselves into a phantasmagoria of Eskimo maidens and white men +resembling the Danes who came each summer to gather riches of ivories +and furs. And the Eskimo maidens and white men danced together. As +these mirage-forms melted, Ootah glanced into the water by his side. +Looking up from the ultramarine depths he saw something white. For an +instant it assumed the likeness of the face of Annadoah. He saw her +golden skin, her cheeks flushed with the pink of spring lichen +blossoms, her lips red as the mountain poppies of late summer. He +started back and called aloud: + +"Annadoah! Annadoah!" For she had smiled, cruelly and disdainfully. +Hoarse laughter answered him--the laughter of white men from the south. +A flock of hawks passed over the water. He was about to shout when he +heard the sound of kayak paddles behind him. He recalled himself and +beckoned silence. + + + + +II + +"_The thought of Annadoah in the embrace of the big blond man, of her +face pressed to his in the white men's strange kiss of abomination, +aroused in Ootah a sense of violation. . . . He heard Annadoah murmur +tenderly, 'Thou art a great man, thou art strong; thy arms hurt me, thy +hands make me ache.'_" + + +Slowly, with silent paddles, the hunters moved over the limpid waters +to the north of the floe. On the far side they saw a horde of walrus +bulls dozing in the sunlight. Behind a ridge of ice they landed, +drawing their kayaks after them. With skin lassos, harpoons and +floats, the party crouched low and crept toward the prey. Thus they +would be mistaken for other walrus by the unsuspecting animals. Ootah +was ahead. Softly they all muttered the magic formulas to prevent +themselves from being seen: + +"_Nunavdlo sermitdlo-akorngakut-tamarnuga_!" In the rear, his eyes +evilly alight, Maisanguaq followed. + +As they approached the herd they scattered. Along the edge of the floe +lay about twenty monstrous animals, steam rising from their nostrils as +they snorted in their slumber. There were a half dozen mother walrus +with half-grown young about them. Now and then they sleepily opened +their eyes and made low maternal noises. + +Before the others realized what had happened, Ootah sprang toward a +bull and delivered his harpoon. It rose in the air and roared +deafeningly. Ootah struck a second time. The animal floundered in a +pool of blood, whipping the floe furiously with its huge tail. + +With a thunderous roar all the others leaped with one glide into the +sea. The floe rocked, the water churned like a boiling cauldron. In a +few minutes Ootah had despatched the beast. Standing erect, he gazed +in defiance at the clouds, at the distant gulls. He forgot the omens, +and laughed with joy. + +Not a moment was to be lost, however. Springing into their kayaks, the +Eskimos put to sea. Now the battle began in earnest. Attacking +enraged walrus in these frail skin boats is probably the most dangerous +form of hunting in the world. At any moment an infuriated animal is +liable to rise from the sea immediately beneath a kayak and upturn it. + +Forming a semi-circle on the water about the swimming herd, the +fearless hunters sat in their tossing boats, each with one arm upraised +ready to strike, and with the other manipulating the paddle. Whenever +a whiskered head rose above the water one of the hunters let a harpoon +descend. After each attack they waited breathlessly. + +Tateraq suddenly let his arm descend--his harpoon point struck home. +He shouted with joy--for he, too, sought Annadoah. Roaring with rage +the lanced sea-horse dived into the deep. The foaming water became red +with blood, and a few snorting, bellowing heads appeared. All about +glared enraged, fiery eyes. The animals plunged and tossed furiously +in the water--the savor of blood maddened them. They began a series of +attacks upon the kayaks. + +Alive to their danger the men kept an alert watch. As they saw a +seething streak described on the surface of the water, as an animal +raged toward them, they would skillfully shift their positions. The +animal would rush snortingly by. + +With dexterous movements of the paddle, Ootah playfully moved his kayak +among the herd, in one hand his harpoon ready to strike. A feverish +desire to make the greatest kill possessed him. Each time a hunter +made an attack he felt a pang of anxiety. Tense rivalry spurred the +young hunters. + +In the midst of the battle Arnaluk struck a beast. Ootah summoned all +his skill, and dashed in succession after a number of appearing +heads--he forgot his danger. Before the others realized it, he had +killed two. Maisanguaq's harpoon went wild. He jealously watched +Ootah and struck without skill, carried away by chagrin and rage. Eré +made valiant attacks for he, too, thought of Annadoah, but the walrus +invariably went skimming from under his blows. Papik's harpoon glanced +the backs of half a dozen. Finally it landed. He shouted with glee. +The inflated floats attached to the harpoon lines bobbed crazily on the +surface of the ensanguined waters as the animals tossed in their death +struggles below. + +Two white tusks appeared near Ootah's kayak. His arm cut the air--his +harpoon sped into the water--an enraged bellow followed. He withdrew +the handle, free of its line and the attached metal point--the point, +with the sinew, descended into the water. It had struck home. + +Suddenly a cry went up. One of the natives waved his arms frantically. +A great monster had risen by his kayak and fastened one of its tusks in +the skin covering the boat from gunwale to gunwale. To strike it with +the harpoon meant that it would plunge and capsize the frail craft. +Crazy with excitement, the native began hissing and spitting in the +beast's face. + +"Lift his head!" cried Ootah, paddling near. "Lift--_tugaq_!--lift his +tusk!" + +"Lift his head!" echoed the others. + +"_Aureti_! _Aureti_! Behave! Behave!" the panic stricken man +ludicrously shrieked at the animal. + +Ootah paddled his kayak to the side of his companion's and, leaning +forward, with a quick movement, threw a lasso over the animal's nose +and under one tusk. With a terrific jerk of the body, he gave a +backward pull--the walrus rose on the water, the kayak was freed of the +tusk and slipped away. With a roar the animal sank into the sea. A +number now rose angrily about Ootah's kayak. They were bent upon a +combined assault. + +Ootah warded off the attacking bulls on all sides with his harpoon. +The air trembled with infuriated calls, the animals were insane with +brute rage. The other natives, alarmed, paddled to a safe distance and +watched the unequal conflict. While Ootah manipulated his harpoons, +Maisanguaq, in the shelter of the floe, watched him with eager eyes. + +He saw Ootah, with almost superhuman dexterity, striking constantly. +Repeatedly he had to renew the metal points on his weapon-handle. One +by one the animals gave up the attack and dispersed, until only an +obdurate bull remained. The battle between man and beast continued, +finally Ootah let the harpoon fly with full strength. It struck the +animal near the heart. Ootah uncoiled the free line attached to the +harpoon point quickly--and the walrus, weighing probably three thousand +pounds, plunged with the impetus of a bulk of iron into the sea. Then +a strange thing happened. + +The pan-shaped drag, attached to the extreme end of the long line +securing the harpoon which Ootah had driven into the animal, became +entangled in the lashings on the forepart of Ootah's kayak. Leaning +forward, Ootah tried to disentangle it. He feared that the beast, in +its struggle, might drag all his weapons and paraphernalia into the +sea. He felt it tugging at the line while he unknotted the tangle. +While he was doing this Maisanguaq saw the beast rise to the surface of +the water not far from Ootah and describe a quick circle about his +kayak. Before he realized it, the leather line had wrapped itself +about his chest and under his arms. It took but a minute for the +animal to circle the boat--then it plunged. Maisanguaq saw Ootah +struggle to release himself; then he saw the kayak tilt as the hunter +was drawn, by the mighty impetus of the plunging sea-horse, into the +water. He heard Ootah's cry--saw the blood red waters seethe as they +closed over him. In a brief interval the kayak righted itself--it was +empty. + +A murmur of dismay rose from the others. "The _tupilak_! the +_tupilak_!" Maisanguaq exultantly murmured, his eyes alight. "Happy +_angakoq_! Thou shalt have much of Ootah's meat!" + +Over the spot where Ootah sank the sun flamed. The water seethed with +the threshing of the animals beneath the sea. Ootah's float finally +rose. The natives watched breathlessly for the reappearance of Ootah. +The float bobbed up and down as the animal's death struggles beneath +the water subsided. + +Maisanguaq, looking at the floats which marked the dead animals, called +out: + +"Ootah hath won Annadoah--hah-hah-hah! Hah! Ootah hath won Annadoah +only to lose her! We shall take Ootah's catch to Annadoah, but Ootah +sleeps. Ootah hath gone to taste the water in the country of the dead! +Hah-hah!" + +At that moment Maisanguaq nearly fell from his kayak. + +"Methinks thou wilt perhaps join the fishes first, friend Maisanguaq," +a familiar voice laughed joyously behind him. + +Maisanguaq's face became livid with dismay. Had the _angakoq_ failed? +And why? + +Turning, he saw Ootah, not far away, clambering from the water onto the +floe. He was unscathed by the mishap--the water even had not +penetrated his skin garments. A joyous cry arose from the hunters as +they saw him running to and fro, working his arms to get up +circulation. Noting Maisanguaq's scowling face, Ootah twitted him: + +"Laugh, friend Maisanguaq," he said, "for winter comes and then thy +teeth will chatter." Maisanguaq scowled deeply--Ootah's blithesome +remarks filled him with rancor. + +"Peace, Maisanguaq. Methinks thou, too, lovest Annadoah," continued +Ootah kindly. "Therefor, I hear thee no spite! For who cannot love +Annadoah. _Ka--ka!_ Come--come!" Shaking the water from him, he bade +the others tow his kayak to the floe. + +Ootah entered his kayak. The struggles of the walrus had subsided, and +only two skin floats bobbed feebly on top of the waves. The hunters +now strung series of kayaks together with strong leather ropes, three +skin boats being attached in a catamaran. Taking up the leather floats +one by one, to the rear kayak of each series the hunters fastened the +harpoon lines which secured the prey. Thus the animals were to be +towed slowly ashore. + +Altogether eight walrus had been secured; four of these had fallen to +the skill of Ootah. Ootah sang for joy. Again he had achieved +distinction on the hunt, and so, with all the better chances of +success, he believed he might pursue his suit for the hand of Annadoah. +With powerful, steady strokes of their paddles the hunters, in their +processions of kayaks, towed the walrus through the sea shoreward. +They joined unrestrainedly in Ootah's hunting chant. Only Maisanguaq +was silent. + +Now and then, unable to restrain his exuberant joy, Ootah sang his love +to the clouds, the waves, the winds. + +"O winds, O happy winds, speed my message to Annadoah!" he called. +"Tell her that I return with the food of the sea! O spirits of the +air, breathe to her that Ootah's heart hungers for her as starving +_ahmingmah_ desire green grass in winter time. O happy, happy waters, +I return to Annadoah with food and fuel for winter--say Ootah +_meuilacto_--would wed--Annadoah. Tell her Ootah calls her +_Mamacadosa_!" + +The others, although disappointed in being outwon, in spontaneous +recognition of his superior feat, chimed a chorus of congratulations. +Suddenly Maisanguaq gleefully pointed a significant finger to the sky. + +"Pst!" he said. + +A black guillemot, like an omen of evil, passed over Ootah's head. + + +By all the immemorial customs of their people, because of the +established pre-eminence of his prowess, Ootah should now find favor in +the eyes of Annadoah. Scarce seventeen summers had passed over +Annadoah's head and of wooers she had a score. The young hunters, not +only of her own tribe, but of others far south, sought her hand. The +fame of her beauty and skill had travelled far. None, it was said, +equalled her dexterity in plaiting sinew thread; none cut and sewed +garments as this maid with tender child's hands. She made weapons, she +brewed marvellous broths. Since the death of her mother she had served +the tribe with her skill. Yet, as the summers passed, she remained +carefree and to all suitors shook her head. "Become a great chief," +she would say. "Win in the games, bring back the musk oxen, then +perhaps Annadoah will listen." Each summer the young men pursued the +hunt with the hope of becoming chief hunter among the tribesmen. But +for three summers Ootah had won signally above them all. To the remote +regions of their world the name of Ootah was whispered with awe. Ootah +carried off honors in the muscle-tapping and finger-pulling matches; he +out-distanced all rivals in kayak races on the sea; he left everyone +behind on perilous journeys to the inland mountains. Of every living +animal on land and sea he had killed, and in quantity of game he +excelled them all. Only of late had Annadoah listened with some degree +of favor to his pleadings. In the days of want he brought blubber to +her for fuel, and provided her with meat. And she was grateful. +Perhaps her heart stirred, but she feared the quiet passion of Ootah, +and by a perverse feminine instinct she resented a tenderness so gentle +that it seemed almost womanly. With winter approaching, and food +scarce, it was inevitable that Annadoah should wed. And now that Ootah +in the quest of the walrus had made the greatest kill, none doubted +that he should be chosen. + +As the kayaks approached the village an unexpected sight greeted the +eyes of the hunters. + +Along the shore, the women of the tribe and strange men were dancing. + +Before the village tents they were gathered in groups. While the elder +women of the tribe beat a savage dance on membrane drums, the +chubby-bodied maidens, dressed in fur trousers, swayed in the arms of +the foreigners. + +As the boats approached the shore, the natives recognized the visitors. +They were one of a half dozen parties of Danish traders who came north +yearly from Uppernavik to gather the results of the season's hunt. +Their visit meant an untold distribution of wealth among the tribe, for +they brought needles, knives, axes, guns, ammunition, and in return +secured a fortune in furs and ivory tusks. They also doled out tea, +biscuits, matches, tobacco, thread, and gaudy handkerchiefs beloved by +the women. Their coming had not been expected this season because of +the dearth of game. + +The men in the boats shouted to one another joyously. Only Ootah felt +a heavy sinking at his heart. He saw the big blond-bearded men +chucking the little women under their chins. Their method of kissing +was strange and repugnant to him. Accustomed only to the chaste +touching of a maiden's face, the kiss of the white men he instinctively +regarded as unnameably unclean. He resented their freedom with the +women. But, children of the heart and brain, primitive, innocent, the +women did not understand the white men's strange behavior. And the +husbands, not comprehending, did not care. A gun, ammunition, a few +boxes of matches--these constituted wealth in value exceeding a wife. + +Now and then Ootah saw some of the visitors raising flasks to their +lips. Then their hilarity rang out more boisterously. + +When they saw the kayaks approaching the shore the strangers shouted. +The hunters replied. Only Ootah remained silent. Disapproving of the +spectacle, his thoughts were busier elsewhere; his heart glowed. + +"Ho, ho, what there?" some called. + +"_Aveq soah_," Maisanguaq replied. + +"Jolly for you!" shouted a Newfoundland sailor, whom Ootah recognized +as having been in the region with some sportsmen from far away America +several years before. + +As they danced the visitors broke into the fragments of a wild sailor's +chorus. + +When they had finished, the Newfoundlander, a tall, tough, red-faced +whaler, drank again from his flask and strode to the shore. His bulky +body reeled unsteadily. + +"Come on up--bring 'er in--hurry up! Gawd, but you'r' blazin' slow!" + +Ootah and his companions landed. Tugging at the leather lines they +drew the walrus one by one from the water to the ice. In these +monstrous palpitating black bodies were tons of food and fuel. Without +wasting time, they fell to their task and dressed the animals. +Meanwhile sleds were brought from the tents and the masses of steaming +meat and blubber were loaded. While the natives were thus busily +engaged, the half-drunken Newfoundlander strode about uttering great +oaths. The strangers' dogs, attracted by the meat, with shrill howling +descended to the ice and surrounded the sled-loads of blubber. Ootah +seized an oar and beat them away. + +"What the hell d'ye mean," the Newfoundlander demanded. "Youh'd beat +our dogs? Eh? Get away, damn youh!" He lifted his fist above Ootah. +His face purpled, Ootah raised his lithe body, his muscles quivered +like drawn rubber. His black eyes flashed proud defiance. + +"Youh'd fight me, eh?--youh defy me, youh damn candle-suckin' heathen!" + +His hand descended. Beyond, the drum beaters ceased, the dancers +turned--a surprised cry went up. + +Ootah drew hack, his face flushed. There was a red spot on his cheek +where the white man's fist had struck. He felt a sense of momentary +terror. The white men's methods of fighting were unfamiliar to the +natives. A blow from the fist is a thing unknown among them. Ootah +drew away--the bullying Newfoundlander followed. + +"Youh'd beat our dogs, eh? Well, I'll show youh, youh oily, +tallow-eatin' husky!" + +He called the dogs, and stooping to the treasured mass of blubber threw +a great mass to the howling animals. + +"Ha! ha! ha! guess youh thought youh were smart, eh?" A second team of +dogs, released from their tethering, came wildly dashing shoreward. +The whaler seized another mass of meat and flung it to the animals. + +Ootah felt a flush of fierce indignation rise within him. His food for +the winter, whereby he hoped to win Annadoah, that which might keep +away the wolves of starvation, was being wantonly wasted. He saw his +companions cowering at the sight of the white man--he drew himself +erect. He saw the Newfoundlander turn and shout to his companions on +the shore. Ootah thought of the saying, "Strike thy enemy when his +back is turned." He seized a heavy harpoon handle, made of a great +narwhal tusk, and swinging it high struck the Newfoundlander a terrific +blow on the head. He fell senseless to the earth, his face bleeding. +Half stunned he tried to struggle to his feet, but Ootah leaped upon +him, and, as was ethical in the native method of fighting, trampled him +into insensibility. The man lay unconscious, his face bleeding +effusively. + +Without a word Ootah continued loading his share of the game onto his +sleds. Attracted by the attack, the other members of the trading party +descended and surrounded the fallen man. + +"Nice trick, eh?" laughed one. "Sam got his all right. 'Minds him +right for being so damned fresh." They surveyed Ootah. "Slick little +devil," one said, handing Ootah his gun. + +"Take it, son," he said, with maudlin magnanimity. "You've got nerve!" + +Ootah smiled bashfully, and shook his head in quiet refusal. + +The half-drunken traders, laughing at what they considered a clever +trick, carried their companion into one of the tents and poured brandy +into his mouth. Then they left him lying alone, half sodden, and +returned to the shore. Some watched the natives working, while others +clasped the native maidens in their arms and danced. Half afraid of +the whites, flattered by their attentions, and extremely embarrassed, +the little women jumped and danced in the visitors' arms. + +Papik finally drew his single sledge load of walrus toward his tent. +He had been rejected repeatedly, but now--with a load of blubber--he +knew he could not afford to miss the opportunity of seeking a wife. + +"Ahningnetty! Ahningnetty!" he hailed a chubby maiden who, breaking +from the arms of one of the white men, was seen running toward her +shelter. + +"What wouldst thou, Papik?" she called. + +"Papik would speak with thee. _Ookiah_ (winter) comes, and his teeth +are sharp. They will bite thee with pangs of hunger, and the meat +Papik brings will make joyful Papik's wife." + +Ahningnetty, summoning some of the other maidens, surveyed Papik's load +of blubber. + +"Truly, as he saith, there is little food, and happy will be Papik's +wife," said one. + +"But when thy blubber is gone with what shalt thou provide her?" asked +Ahningnetty. + +"Perchance the bears will come," Papik said. "And skillful is Papik's +hand with the lance." + +"But thy hand is long, Papik, and long fingers soon lose their skill." + +Ahningnetty dubiously shook her head. + +"But thou art chubby--yea," said Papik admiringly--"thou art fat as the +mother bears after a fat summer, and thy body is warm; it giveth heat; +Papik would give thee food, and thou shalt keep him warm during the +long winter." + +The maiden smiled delightedly. For, as Papik indicated, whereas a man +may admire a slimmer beauty during the summer, when the long night +comes a maiden fat and chubby is a wife to be prized. + +"But alas, thy nose is long, Papik," she said, shaking her head. + +And the others chorused: + +"Long nose, short life! Long nose--short life! Long nose--short +life!" In anger Papik struck the offending member, and drawing his +sledge after him proceeded toward his tent. + +Assisted by a number of the natives, Ootah, smiling, exultant, drew +five sled-loads of blubber up over the ice toward Annadoah's tent. +With their comparatively meagre portions the others followed. To +Annadoah Ootah meant to show the spoils of his quest. To her he +desired to present the greater portion of the riches he had by his +prowess secured. Here was meat to serve them during the long winter, +and in that region the catch was a priceless fortune. Surely Annadoah +could not refuse him now. He had proved himself beyond question the +chief hunter of the tribe. His eyes filled, his temples excitedly +throbbed. He felt a greater joy than that the natives feel when the +sun dawns after the long night. In his heart pulsed the sweet song of +spring's first ineffable bird. + +Not far from Annadoah's tent he paused. About him the natives, +wondering, admiring, had gathered. He turned to them; he felt a +strength, a dignity, an assertion he had never experienced before. His +voice rose in a happy, ingenuously proud chant of exultation: + +"From the bosom of _Nerrvik_, queen of the sea, have I not brought food +for the long winter; yea, have I not for many moons sought to win in +the chase that I might claim Annadoah? Annadoah! Annadoah!" + +"Yea, that thou mightest claim Annadoah! Thou art the strongest hunter +of the tribe," the natives rejoicingly chorused. + +"Did I not win in the muscle-tapping games?" he sang. "Did I not speed +the arrow as none other--did I not speed the arrows as the birds fly?" + +"Yea," they replied, "thou didst speed the arrow with the skill of the +happy dead playing in the aurora--over the earth as the birds fly didst +thou send the arrows. Strong is thy arm, Ootah." + +Not far away some of the natives, joining in the chorus, began beating +drums. The white men hilariously drank from bottles and joined in the +merry dances. + +"Did I not call the walrus and seal from the sea--as none other? Have +I not lured the caribou from their hidden lair? Have I not enticed the +birds, the foxes, and the bear by my calls--as none other of the +tribes?" + +In succession Ootah uttered imitations of the calls of the walrus +bulls, the female caribou, and cries of the various birds. + +"Have I not held converse with the animals of the land, the birds of +the air, and shall I not one day perchance comb the hair of _Nerrvik_ +in the sea!" + +The drums beat more loudly; the dancers hopped and leaped. The chorus +replied: + +"Thou lurest the walrus and seal from the sea, thou enticest the +caribou, _ahmingmah_ and birds unto thee! Thou hast learned the +language of nature, and the happy spirits are kind to thee! Marvellous +is thy power, Ootah." + +And in the chorus, deep, hoarse, sneeringly ironical rang the words of +Maisanguaq: + +"Marvellous is thy power, Ootah," and his low bitter laughter followed. + +The white men began to sing as they danced with the chubby women. In +couples they rocked to and fro. + +"Have I not killed of all the birds of the air, the animals of the land +and sea! Have I not observed the customs of the august dead? Have I +done aught to bring misfortune to the tribe?" + +In spontaneous recognition of his pre-eminence the young men freely +yielded Annadoah. Only Maisanguaq felt bitter. + +Ootah summoned his helpers and the sleds of blubber were drawn to the +immediate entrance of Annadoah's tent. He seemed to step upon air. +His heart bounded. + +"Annadoah! Annadoah!" he called. "Ootah waits thee. Ootah hath +brought thee treasure from the depths of the sea. Strong is the arm +and brave is the heart of Ootah when the arm strikes and the heart +beats with the thought of thee." + +Seeing him there, the natives ceased dancing. The white men, curious, +drew near the tent. + +As he stood there, his head erect, proud, expectant, he became +conscious of a sudden ominous silence on the part of his companions. +Some distance away the women were whispering to one another, and above, +in the sky, circled a black guillemot. + +"Annadoah," he softly called. + +Only the hawk replied. + +"Annadoah, I bring thee my love, as constant as my shadow! I bring +thee riches! Ootah would give thy couch new furs and caress thee." + +From the brown, weather worn sealskin tent came the murmurous sound of +voices. Ootah heard the voice of Annadoah--and that of another. + +The black bird in the sky screamed. + +Not far distant in the tent of the _angakoq_ Ootah heard the low +disquieting sound of a drum beaten in some malevolent incantation. + +His heart sank as heavily as a dead walrus sinks in the sea. + +Something stifled him. Then the flap of the tent parted and Annadoah +stepped forth, her head tossed haughtily, her beautiful eyes flashing. + +"Get hence," she said. "Thou art a boy, thy tongue is that of a boy. +Thou art soft--thou hast the heart of a woman." + +"Annadoah . . ." Ootah's voice wailed. The stretch of shore seemed to +heave and writhe. He put out his hands as if to ward off a blow. + +Behind Annadoah, at the door of the tent, the form of a man stooped. +As he emerged, Ootah saw he was taller than Annadoah's tent. His +shoulders were broad and massive. His face, bronzed by the burning +sun, was like tanned leather, hard, wrinkled; his expression was as +grim as graven stone. His large blue eyes glittered with the coldness +of flint. His hair and long curling moustache were blond. Ootah +recognized "Olafaksoah"--Olaf, the great white trader--whom he had seen +two seasons before at a southern village. He was noted for his +brutality and hard bargaining. + +"What's all the noise about?" he growled. His voice was deep and gruff. + +Ootah staggered back. + +"Annadoah, Annadoah," he moaned softly, supporting himself on the +upstander of his loaded sled. + +Olafaksoah strode forward with great steps, scowling. He critically +surveyed the loads of blubber and gleaming walrus tusks. + +"Good haul, boy--good haul! Game's been pretty scarce all along the +coast. It's lucky we got here in time, eh, comrades? What'll you +take"--he turned to Ootah--"I don't know your name." He spoke in +broken Eskimo. + +"Ootah," Annadoah whispered, "that is his name. Ha-ha, thou callest +him a boy." + +Ootah winced. + +Olafaksoah, with heavy strides, passed down the line of sledges. +Turning to his men, he called: + +"Bring the junk." + +A sled of matches, needles, tea, biscuits, knives, tin cups, a few +hatchets, and several guns and cases of ammunition were brought. While +these were unloaded a half-dozen eager natives hastened into their +tents and hurriedly brought out their portions of the preciously +preserved skins and ivories of the meagre summer hunt. Clamorous, +insistent, they presented these to Olafaksoah. They clustered around +him so that he could not walk. Ootah watched as the bargaining began. +He saw Annadoah clinging near the white trader. A number of the white +men began dickering down the line with Arnaluk. + +"Load blubber--one tin cup--box black powder." + +Arnaluk shook his head. Olafaksoah cuffed him with his fist. The +timid native did not have the courage to resent this brutality. + +"What d'ye want, you greedy savage--two boxes matches!" + +"Two boxes matches--one box shooting fire--one tin cup." + +Still he could not be persuaded to part with the precious meat. +Olafaksoah swore and shook his fists. Fearful of offending the +stranger, the women joined in and shrieked at Arnaluk, urging him to +consent. + +Unprotesting, he let them draw away his sled of blubber and tusks. He +had a tin cup, matches and cartridges--which he could not eat. + +"Rotten lot," Olafaksoah said to Papik, surveying his single catch of a +young walrus. Papik winced at this reproach. + +"Two boxes fire powder," said Olafaksoah. Papik refused. Olafaksoah +browbeat him in a high voice. Finally he kicked him. "One case +needles." He called Papik's mother and chucked her under the chin. +She smiled at him, awed, flattered, half afraid. Papik parted with his +load for a box of ammunition and a few needles. Meanwhile the +bartering went on for the hoarded wealth of the tribe. Eager to +precede one another, the natives rushed to and fro, bringing armfuls of +ivories and furs from their tents. In exchange for stuff of trifling +value the white men secured, by their method of threatening bargaining, +loads of blue and white fox skins, caribou hides, and walrus and +narwhal tusks which the natives had previously preserved. One man +parted with five tusks, worth as many hundred dollars, for two gaudy +handkerchiefs for his wife. Another gave several exquisite fox skins +for a plug of tobacco. When they demanded more biscuits, tobacco or +matches than were offered, Olafaksoah bullied them with threats. Yet +they hung about him, eager for the almost worthless barter, for the +time being valuing a box of crackers and allotments of tea more than +their substantial supply of walrus meat. Finally the leader paused +before Ootah's loaded sledges. + +"What'll you take--a gun, fire-powder?" + +Ootah shook his head. + +Olafaksoah had recourse to his stock-in-trade of oaths, and told his +men to bring a gun, two hatchets, ammunition. + +Ootah was still obdurate. The natives' voices arose murmurously, for +they felt it was not well to offend the strangers. During future +seasons they might not come again, as they threatened, with ammunition +and guns. This the natives feared as a calamity. + +"Bring some crackers--tea," Olafaksoah paused. Ootah watched Annadoah +nestling near the "white trader." He had forgotten all about the +sledges of meat. He did not hear Olafaksoah. He still continued +shaking his head. + +"I'll be liberal with you, son," Olafaksoah indulgently increased his +offer. + +Six more boxes of ammunition, more tea and crackers were added to the +pile. + +Ootah again mechanically shook his head. Amid all of those about him, +he saw only the face of Annadoah, golden as sunlight and pink as the +lichen blossoms of spring. Through her open _ahttee_, or fur garment, +he saw her breasts as tender as those of eider-feathered birds. The +sight of her melted his heart, the streams of spring were loosened +within him. Yet, with an agonized pang, he observed her gaze adoringly +and eagerly at the tall stranger's hard face; he saw her quiver at the +sound of his harsh, gruff voice. Olafaksoah's brutal masculinity for +the time dominated the shrinking femininity of the girl. Ootah saw +Annadoah beseechingly, almost fawningly, touch the white chief's horny +hand and nestle it close against her cheek. + +Olaf, the trader, was oblivious to this. + +"Greedy, eh? Well, we need the meat! If we're goin' to stay here to +chance hunting our dogs got to be fed!" More supplies were brought. +Still Ootah did not speak. + +The white chief presently gazed hard at Ootah. Then his eyes +brightened with amused mirth. He saw the despairing, yearning gaze of +the youth toward the girl he had selected to favor. + +"Ha, ha, ha!" he laughed good-naturedly. "I see. I've keel-hauled +your Romeo stunt, eh? Want the stuff?" He kicked the supplies +interrogatively. + +Ootah sadly shook his head. He dully heard the vulgar gibes of the +white men and the mocking laughter of Maisanguaq. + +One of the natives began beating a drum. Ootah giddily caught an +evanescent vision of women dancing with reeling traders. He heard +Olafaksoah as he entered Annadoah's tent laughing heartily. + +The thought of Annadoah in the embrace of the big blond man, of her +face pressed to his in the white men's strange kiss of abomination, +aroused in Ootah a sense of violation, an instinctive repugnance akin +to the horror a native feels for the dead. All the ardent hopes of his +life for many moons had centered upon his bringing the results of a +successful hunt to Annadoah and asking her to share his igloo, to +become his wife. And now, in his hour of high victory, after everyone +had acclaimed him, he was crushed. + +A fervid fever seemed to take fire in his forehead and flush his veins, +yet his heart was colder than ice, his hands and feet were cold. He +felt as though someone were strangling him; he felt giddy, suddenly +sick. At that moment he was too stunned to realize fully the blighting +tragedy which had annihilated his hopes. + +Nearby in her tent he heard Annadoah's voice, sweet as the song of +buntings. + +"Olafaksoah, Olafaksoah," he heard her murmur tenderly, "thou art a +great man. Thou art strong. Thy arms hurt me, thy hands make me +ache." Then Ootah heard the man's hard voice and Annadoah's repressed +murmurs of mingled pain and delight. The day became black about him. +He felt that he must get away; a wild madness to run seized him. He +felt the impetus of the winds in his feet. Turning on his heel, his +face to the northwest, he fled. + +In the sky overhead the black guillemot screamed. + + + + +III + +"_Her lips are red--red as a wound in the throat of a deer._" + + +For seven weeks Ootah lived in the mountains. The violence of his +bitterness and grief scared away the wild hawks in whose high nesting +place he found shelter. At the door of that icy cave above the clouds, +he called upon the spirits of the mountains for vengeance. + +"_Ioh--ioh_!" he wailed. "Spirits of the glaciers, lift your +hands--strike! Descend and smite Olafaksoah! carry him to the +narwhals; let the whales feed upon his body. May the soul of his +hands, and the soul of his feet, and the soul of his heart, and the +soul of his head struggle with one another. May he never rest! +_Ioh--ioh--ioh--ioh_!" + +The boom of sliding avalanches answered him. The sound was like that +of muffled thunder. Wild cries arose from the mountain birds. They +sounded demoniacal in the taut air. + +Far below soared the black vultures of the arctic. In a fit of anger +Ootah shook his arms frantically at the shrieking birds. For they +seemed to mock him. + +"Spirits of the clouds," he wailed, "_Ioh--ioh--ioh-h_! Ye that wander +to the south! Ye that fly to the north! Ye that struggle hither and +yon, from the east to the west. Bear my curses to Annadoah. Tell her +that the heart of Ootah is bitter. Tell her Ootah would that her voice +become as harsh as the winds of _ookiah_ (winter). Tell her Ootah +would that her face become withered as frozen lands in winter. Tell +her Ootah would that her heart rot within her, that the wild beasts +feed upon her breasts. _Ioh-h--ioh-h-h_! Sing unto her the curses of +Ootah, and may she not rest!" + +Below him the clouds, burning with vivid fire, moved in the varying +strata of air currents--to Ootah they were conveying his messages. The +sun, circling low about the horizon, shifted its rays, and within the +nebulous cloud-masses in the valleys, fountains of prism light played. +In this radiant phantasmagoria messages in turn came to Ootah. + +He saw the figuration of Annadoah's tent, and within, reclining upon +her couch, the form of Annadoah. At the mirage picture of the +beauteous and beloved maiden his heart throbbed violently. In the high +altitude he found respiration difficult, and now he almost suffocated +for lack of breath. He felt a pang at his heart as he saw the white +chief enter the tent. The winds wailed sibilant and agonizing messages +into the ears of Ootah: + +"Thou hast cursed Annadoah. Foolish Ootah! For thou lovest Annadoah! +Yea, her voice is as sweet as the sound of melting streams in +springtime. Lo, she whispers into the ears of Olafaksoah: 'Thou art +strong, Olafaksoah; Ootah hath the heart of a woman. Thou hurtest me, +Olafaksoah; thy arms bruise me, thy hands make me ache; but thou art +strong, thou art great, Olafaksoah; the heart of Annadoah trembles for +joy of thee.' Thus saith Annadoah!" + +And in the winds Ootah heard Olafaksoah's coarse laughter. + +"_Ioh--ioh-h-h_!" Ootah moaned. + +"Thou wouldst that Annadoah's face be blighted as frozen land in +winter," laughed the winds, mockingly. "Thou dotard Ootah! Thou +lovest the face of Annadoah. It is very fair. It is golden as the +radiant face of _Sukh-eh-nukh_. Her eyes are as bright as stars in the +winter night. Oh-h-h, Ootah! Into the eyes of Olafaksoah Annadoah +gazes, yea, she faints with joy, thou silly Ootah!" + +"_Ioh--ioh-h-h_!" wailed Ootah. + +"Her lips are red, Ootah---red as a wound in the throat of a deer." + +And in the cloud vision Ootah saw the blond chief take the head of +Annadoah between his two palms and press her lips fiercely upon his +own. Ootah's heart trembled as water. + +"_Ioh--io-h-h_!" he sobbed, and tears coursed from his eyes. + +The constant haunting thought of Annadoah's face pressed close to that +of Olafaksoah somehow made his face burn and his bosom ache. + +"Ootah, Ootah, thou wouldst that Annadoah's heart might wither, yea, as +a frozen bird in the blast of winter, foolish Ootah, who lovest +Annadoah! Soft beats the heart of Annadoah upon the bosom of +Olafaksoah; yea, for very joy it flutters as a mating bird in summer +time. Thou wouldst that beasts might rend her little breasts--safe are +they now in the embrace of the strong man from the south. Ootah! +Ootah!" + +Ootah wrung his hands. + +"Thy curses fall dead upon the ears of Annadoah, she who hears only the +voice of Olafaksoah." + +In the winds Ootah heard the whisper of Olafaksoah in the dim tent. He +heard Annadoah's rapturously murmurous replies. + +"Olafaksoah shareth the igloo of Annadoah," whispered the winds +suggestively. And Ootah knew the Eskimo custom. + +Annadoah, by sharing her simple habitation with him, had by choice +formally become the wife of Olafaksoah. And according to the unwritten +law of ages she was now as much his property as his dogs. He might +abuse her, and desert--and thus divorce--her whenever he chose. She +might, at his pleasure, be loaned as a wife to another, and in this she +would have no word. Or she might be given away, and dare not protest. +Ootah felt that she was lost to him irretrievably. + +For hours Ootah stood at the mouth of his mountain eyrie in dumb agony. +All that he suffered it is beyond me to tell you. For days he crouched +there, motionless, stark dumb, every fibre of him aching. + + +In the valleys below, as the hours of the burning days and golden +nights passed, the sunlight constantly shifted. In the palpitating +mists Ootah read of the days' doings at the camp. He saw the white men +bartering for the meagre remaining furs and ivories gathered by the +tribe. With the natives he saw them going on long fruitless hunts. +Finally one day he witnessed them harpoon a half dozen walrus on the +sea. They laboriously towed the catch ashore and rejoiced over the +unexpected wealth of oil and blubber. But the white men claimed the +entire prize, loaded their extra sledges, liberally fed their dogs, and +doled out but a penurious allotment of meat and blubber to the tribe. + +But in all this Ootah had no concern. Day by day the cloud-swimming +valleys below blazed with crimson-shot conflagrations . . . Ootah knew +the dead were lighting their monstrous camp fires--but even in this he +found no interest. Daily he became fainter and fainter from lack of +food, and daily, constantly, the winds whispered: + +"The mouth of Annadoah is very red--red as a wound in the throat of a +deer . . ." and then sibilantly--"softly beats the heart of Annadoah +against the bosom of Olafaksoah." Then every fibre of him burned and +ached. + +One day the radiant valley darkened . . . Out of the sky, as if rising +from worlds beyond the horizon, a cyclopean phantasm of clouds took +form. Rising higher and higher toward the zenith, ominous and +sinister, it gathered substance and spread across the glowing heavens +like a film of smoke . . . It took upon itself the awful semblance of +a mighty thing, half-beast, half-man. As if to strike, it slowly +lifted the likeness of a gigantic arm shrouded with tattered +clouds . . . The baleful shade shut off the sunlight from the +earth . . . Ootah's heart quailed . . . Terror gripped him . . . For +he saw--what few men had ever beheld--the shadow of _Perdlugssuaq_, the +Great Evil. Finally he found voice. + +"O most dreadful of the _tornarssuit_ (spirits)," he called, grovelling +on his knees, "smite me! Smite me!" + +During the tragic days of his isolation the full realization of all +that he had lost had come to Ootah. He fed upon the memory of +Annadoah's face. He remembered how, with the vision of that face +before him, he had excelled in the hunts and games, and for many moons +had felt confident of winning her. He dwelt for hours upon her +stunning rejection, of how she clung to the white man; he visioned with +heart corroding bitterness her days with Olafaksoah, and he burned with +unnameable anguished pangs as he conjured her nights. Now, the +violence of his grief exhausted, he invoked death. + +Expectant, fearful, with closed eyes, he waited. + +In the valley a storm gathered, and the low whine of the winds Ootah +believed to be the breath of the descending terror. The air became +unbearably colder as the dreaded creator of death, darkness and ice +descended. The taut suspense was terrible. Finally Ootah reached the +limits of human endurance--merciful unconsciousness blotted out the +long agony. + +When he recovered the storm had passed. Scores of birds, driven +against the rocks by the terrible winds, lay dead at the entrance of +the cave. Surely the Great Evil had struck, but he lived. Hunger +stirred within him and he fell upon the birds. + +Later he sought game in the lower valleys. He had lances and bows and +arrows with him. He found an inland vale, where a patch of green grass +was exposed despite a recent fall of snow--there a herd of musk oxen +grazed. He drew his bow of bone and sinew. One fell after the first +quiver of his arrow. His skill was marvellous. He had struck a vital +spot. He finished his killing of the fallen animal with a lance. He +feasted upon the raw meat, and carried away with him up to his eyrie +enough to last for many days. + +The sun meanwhile sank lower and lower; there were long hours of +twilight; snow storms came; the cold increased. Ootah felt the first +whip of approaching winter. Ootah's spirit melted. Disquieting +messages came in the cold winds and darkening clouds. His heart beat +quickly at what the frightened birds told him. Olafaksoah, they said, +struck Annadoah. As she lay on the ground he kicked her. In the +snow-driven wind Ootah heard the echo of her heart-broken weeping. He +revoked the curses he had uttered; he cursed his own weakness whereby +he had invoked harm to her. Then in the winds Ootah heard the beat of +drums. In the clouds he saw the white men dancing with the Eskimo +maidens. Day after day they danced--day after day Annadoah wept. +Olafaksoah had become wearied. Disappointed in the failure to secure +greater supplies, he vented his impatience upon Annadoah. Cruelly he +bruised her little hands, he mocked and jeered her when she pleaded +with him. In fits of anger he often struck her. Finally, one day, in +the cloud phantasmagoria, Ootah saw Olafaksoah reeling from the strange +red-gold water the white men drank. He entered Annadoah's tent. She +crouched, terrified, in a corner. With him were three of his rough +blond companions. They staggered--and in the winds they sang. +Olafaksoah pointed consentingly to Annadoah. One of the men attempted +to embrace her. Then she rose defiantly and did what few Eskimo women +ever dared. She smote the man's leering face and, sobbing, sank on her +knees before Olafaksoah. He roared out things the Eskimos do not +understand. "_Goddlmighty_!" and more awful words. His fist +descended. In the winds Ootah heard Annadoah scream and call his name. + +That day he descended from the mountains. + + +Much that Ootah conjured in his mind, or imagined he saw in the clouds, +really happened. Whether he actually sensed these things by some +wonderful power of clairvoyance, which the natives themselves +believe--or whether he just accurately guessed what occurred, I do not +know. But of this I can tell: + +By that strange contradictoriness of the feminine--much the same all +the world over--by that inherent, inborn desire of subjugation to the +brutal and domineering in the male, Annadoah had given herself +unreservedly to Olafaksoah. At the sound of his firm step she +trembled. His hard, brutal embraces caused her heart to flutter with +joy. At first he told her he would take her with him to the south. +Annadoah believed him. Then he changed his mind, and said she must +wait until the next season for him. She silently acquiesced. She +called upon all her simple arts to please him. Carefully she oiled her +face and made the golden skin soft by rubbing it with the fur of +animals; with a broken comb, left with her mother years before by a +party of explorers, she combed her long, black and wonderful hair and +elaborately arranged it behind her. About her forehead she bound a +narrow fillet of fine, furry hares' skin. She donned new garments; her +_ahttee_ was made of the delicate skins of birds, her hood of white fox +hides. To all this Olafaksoah seemed blind; at times, with coarse, +half-maudlin tenderness, he caressed her, called her his "little girl" +and promised to "come back next spring." But Annadoah was useful to +him otherwise. + +During the days when Olafaksoah and his men were hunting or gathering +furs and ivory at nearby villages along the coast, Annadoah sewed skins +into garments for Olafaksoah and his men. Sometimes she went with +Olafaksoah on his expeditions and employed her coquetry upon the +susceptible men of the migrating tribes to secure bargains for him. +For a box of matches she would cajole from her people ivories worth +hundreds of dollars. She persuaded them to rob themselves of the +walrus meat and blubber they had gathered for winter and give them to +her master in exchange for tin cups and ammunition, all of which would +be useless when the night came on. To Ootah she gave no thought until +one day the white man struck her. As he vented his rage at not +securing more riches upon her during the ensuing days, her heart more +and more instinctively turned to the youth "with the heart of a woman" +whom she had rejected. When Olafaksoah brought his companions to the +tent her soul rose in rebellion. In the camp there was an orgy. None +of the married men, who for a slight consideration were willing to +permit their wives to dance with the traders, objected to the drunken +carousal. Ribald songs sounded strange in this region of the world. +Yet after Olafaksoah had kicked her and left her lying in the tent, +high above the sound of the sailors' doggerel songs, Annadoah +frantically called aloud: + +"Ootah! Ootah!" + +For a long time she lay in a stupor. Her face was bleeding. When she +regained consciousness the white chief and his men had left. They had +taken with them all available furs, ivories and provisions in the +village. + +At the door of her tent Annadoah stood, dry-eyed, her hair dishevelled. +To the south she yearningly extended her arms. Her heart still ached +toward the man who had lied to her and deserted her. She was left, a +divorced woman, alone among her people, with no one to care for her +during the long winter night. + +As she stood there the light of the descending sun, which was now far +below the rim of the horizon, paled. Driven by a frigid wind, howling +raucously from the mountains, great snow clouds piled along the sky +line. Out at sea the tips of the waves became capped--leprous white +arms seemed reaching hopelessly for help from the depths of the sea. +The sky blackened. The increasing gusts tore at the frail tents. The +wolf-dogs crouched low to the ground and whined. A tremor of anxiety +filled the hearts of the tribe. Presently the clouds were torn to +shreds and whipped furiously over the sky. In the thickening grey +gloom Annadoah watched the men of the tribe fastening their sleds and +belongings to the earth . . . mere dark shadows. Above her tent, +tossed by the wind in its eddying flight, a raven screamed. + +Annadoah finally entered and threw herself upon the rocky floor of her +dwelling. As the furies were loosed outside her voice rose and fell +with the wailing grief and wrath of the wind. "Olafaksoah! +Olafaksoah!" But only the hoarse evil call of the black bird answered +during lulls in the storm. And Annadoah heard it, with a sinking of +her cold heart, as the voice of fate. + + + + +IV + +"_'Do the gulls that freeze to death in winter fly in springtime?' she +asked, simply. . . 'The teeth of the wolves are in my heart' . . ._" + + +Desolate and alone, Annadoah walked along a crevice in the +land-adhering ice of the polar sea. + +The prolonged grey evening of the arctic was resolving into the long +dark, and the Eskimo women, as is their custom at this time of the +year, had gathered along the last lane of open water--which writhed +like a sable snake over the ice--to celebrate that period of mourning +which precedes the dreadful night, and to give their last messages and +farewells to the unhappy and disconsolate souls of the drowned, who, +when the ice closed, should for many moons be imprisoned in the sea. + +An unearthly twilight, not unlike that dim greenish luminescence which +filters through emerald panes in the high nave of a great cathedral, +lay upon the earth. The forms of the mourning women were strangely +magnified in the curious semi-luminance and, as their bodies moved to +and fro in the throes of their grief, they might have been, for all +they seemed, shadowy ghosts bemoaning their sins in some weird +purgatory of the dead. + +In the northern sky a faint quivering streak of light, resembling the +reflection of far away lightning, played--the first herald of the +aurora. To the south a gash of reddish orange, like the tip of a +bloody-gleaming knife-blade, severed the thick purple clouds. There +was a faint reflected glimmer on the unfrozen southern sea. + +Snow had fallen on the land, igloos had been built. Over the village +and against the frozen promontories loomed a majestic yet fearful +shadowy shape--that of a giant thing, swathed in purple, its arm +uplifted threateningly--the spectre of suffering and famine. + +This wraith, brought into being by the gathering blackness in the +gulches and crevices of the mountains, filled the hearts of the natives +with unwonted foreboding. + +Profound silence prevailed. + +Already the sea for miles along the shore was frozen. The open water +lay at so great a distance from the land that the sound of the waves +was stilled. The birds had disappeared. Even the voices of the +sinister black guillemots and ravens were heard no more. + +Annadoah's sobs rose softly over the ice. + +"Spirit of my mother, thou who wast carried by the storm-winds into the +sea! Hear me! Annadoah loved one Olafaksoah, a chief from the south; +for him the heart of Annadoah became very great within her. And now +the heart of Annadoah aches. For he hath gone to the south. And not +until the birds sing in spring will he return. And Annadoah is left +alone. _Ookiah_ comes with the lash of wicked walrus thongs, and there +is no blubber buried outside Annadoah's shelter. Neither is there oil. +And the couch of Annadoah is cold--so very cold. Yea, listen, spirit +of my mother, and bring Olafaksoah back, that he may bruise Annadoah's +hands, that he may cast Annadoah to the ground and crush Annadoah if he +wills with his feet! Io-oh-h!" + +She moaned this in a curious sing-song sort of chant. Over the ice the +voices of the other women rose, and each, to her departed relatives and +friends who had died in the sea, told about the important incidents of +the year and the misgivings for the winter, in a varying crooning song. + +Annadoah passed Tongiguaq, who jumped and danced in a frenzy of grief. +Tongiguaq had lost three children; two had been drowned, and a new-born +baby, three months before, was born maimed. According to the custom of +the people, a fatherless defective child is doomed to death. So +rigorous is their struggle to survive, so limited the means of +existence, that a tribe cannot bear the burden of a single unnecessary +life. So in keeping with this Lycurgean law, worked out by instinct +after the stern experience of ages, a rope had been twisted about the +neck of Tongiguaq's baby and it had been cast into the sea. + +All this the weeping woman told in her chant to the departed. When she +saw Annadoah approaching, she paused. + +"Here cometh the she-wolf that hath devoured the food of our tribe," +she wailed, intense bitterness in her voice. "Yea, by her cajolery she +persuaded our men to give unto the traders from the south our precious +food. And now we starve! Yea, she hath robbed us. She is as the +breath of winter, as the blackness of the night." + +Along the line of wailing women Tongiguaq's reproach was suddenly taken +up. As Annadoah walked by them they did a strange thing. The natives +fear their dead--they never even mention their names. For possessed of +great power are the dead, and they can wreak, as befits their moods, +unlimited good or ill. Believing they could persuade the dead to array +themselves against Annadoah, the women took up Tongiguaq's denunciation +and reviled Annadoah in their weird chant to the departed. Annadoah +wrung her hands and wept. Bitter and jealous because the white chief +had selected her during his stay, their bosoms full of the harbored ill +will and envy of years because she had been the most desired by the +young men of the tribes, the women now invoked curses upon the deserted +and unprotected girl through the medium of the incorporeal powers. + +The dread of it filled poor Annadoah's heart. She quailed at the +bitter execrations called upon her head. Instinctively her hand +reached through the opening of her _ahttee_ and she clutched at a piece +of old half-decayed skin. This was a remnant of her mother's father's +clothing, a amulet given her as a child, when saliva from the maternal +grandfather's mouth had been rubbed on her lips, and which she believed +protected her from ill fortune. + +"Io-ooh! io-oh!" Annadoah moaned in pain. + +The women forgot their own tragedies. They forgot the messages they +were imparting to the dead. Directly they might not be able to invoke +any effective curse upon Annadoah; but well they knew, indeed, the +awful power of the disembodied. And to the dead in the cold shuddering +sea they told how Annadoah had played with the men, how she had +betrayed them to the white traders, cajoling them to rob themselves of +food, and how, because of her, famine now confronted the tribe; they +told of the long devotion of Ootah, the desired of all the maidens, and +how Annadoah had rejected him. + +Possessed by a frantic contagion of released rage, their voices rose +and fell in a frightful chanting malediction. In the weird gloom their +vague forms leaped about, their arms writhing like black things in the +air as they called the names of their individual dead to hear. + +As their voices approached a crescendo they danced with increasing +hysteria. Some shrieked and fell to the ice groaning, their bodies +twisting in convulsions. Others laughed madly--laughed at the +dreadful horrors with which the dead would smite Annadoah. Losing all +control they were carried away by their delirious malevolence; their +voices reached a high shrill pitch. Their arms clawed the air. +Through the dead curses were invoked upon Olafaksoah, the great trader, +who had cowed them and robbed them. They begged of the _tornarssuit_ +that he might be rended by wolves, that his body might rot unburied, +and that the spirits of his limbs might be severed and be compelled to +wander in restless torment forever. They called anathemas upon his +unborn children; and of their dead, who should be imprisoned in +darkness in the depths of the sea, they furiously invoked upon +Annadoah's offspring the curse of the long night . . . Their voices +shuddered over the ice as they demanded that most dreadful of all +dreaded evils--that Annadoah's child might be born as blind to light +and the joy of light as the dead in the sea. + +Annadoah crouched in frantic terror upon the ice. From the Greenland +highlands a moaning echo answered the women. To Annadoah the hill +spirits had joined in cursing her--all nature seemed to upbraid her. +Tremblingly, with a last lingering hope, she crept on her knees to the +edge of the lane of lapping black water. She whispered a pathetic plea +to _Nerrvik_, the gentle queen of the sea, whose hand had been severed +by those she loved, and who felt great tenderness for men. Annadoah +listened. + +"Thou art cold of heart to him who loves thee, Annadoah," a voice +seemed to whisper in the lapping waves. "Thou art beautiful as the +sun, but as _Sukh-eh-nukh_ shall thou be eternally sad. Thou shalt +lose because of thine own self the greatest of all treasures. That is +fate." + +Far out on the open ocean spectral fire-flecks flashed like mast-lights +on swinging ships. These mysterious jack o' lanterns of the arctic are +caused by the crashing together of icebergs covered with phosphorescent +algae. + +To Annadoah the dead were lighting their oil lamps for the long night. +As she watched the weird illuminations a paralyzing fear of the vague +unknown world beyond the gate of death filled her, and her blood ran +cold. She felt utterly crushed, utterly helpless, and utterly +deserted, both in the affection of the living and that of the dead. +She uttered a despairing cry and fell back in a cold faint. The women +drew about as if to leap upon her. + +A momentary wavering of the northern lights revealed her face grown sad +and wan. The women stood still, however, for approaching in the +distance they heard a man's voice calling: + + "Avatarpay--avatarpay, + akorgani--akorgani, + anagpungah . . ." + +Those mystic words, believed to give magic speed to the one who utters +them, came in the well known tones of Ootah. A joyous cry went up from +the women. + +When Annadoah opened her eyes Ootah was bending over her. + +"I was held in the mountains, Annadoah. The hill spirits were at war. +The snow came, the storm spirits loosed the ice. I fell into an abyss +. . . I lay asleep . . . for very long. It seemed like many moons. I +could barely walk when I awoke. I had no food. I became very weak, +but I uttered the _serrit_ (magic formula;), those words of the days +when man's sap was stronger, and the good winds bore me hither." + +A mystical silver light had risen over the horizon, and in the soft +glimmer Annadoah saw that the face of Ootah was haggard and drawn. His +voice was weak. + +"The sun hath gone," murmured Ootah. "The long night comes. Ootah +heard thy cry and has come to care for thee, Annadoah." + +His voice was a caress. His face sank dangerously near the face of the +girl. She panted into full consciousness and struggled to free +herself. Ootah helped her to her feet. + +"The winter comes . . . and famine," muttered Annadoah, hopelessly. +She pointed to the gaunt, hollow-eyed shadow, empurpled-robed, against +the frozen cliffs. "My heart is cold--I am resigned to death." + +"But I have come to give furs for thy couch," murmured Ootah, a +beseeching look in his eyes. "Thou wilt need shelter--I shall build +thee an igloo. Thou wilt need food--I shall share all that I have with +thee and seek more. Thou wilt need oil for heat. I shall get this for +thee." + +Annadoah made a passionate gesture. A curious perverse resentment for +the youth's insistent devotion rose in her heart. + +"Nay," she said, warding him away. "My shadow yearns only to the south +. . . the far, far south." + +"Thy soul yearns to the south--forsooth, will I all the more cherish +thee. Thou art frail, and the teeth of _ookiah_ (winter) are sharp." + +"The teeth of _ookiah_ are not so sharp as the teeth in my heart," +sobbed Annadoah. + +Ootah felt a great pity for her--a pity and tenderness greater than his +jealousy. + +"But I shall teach thee to forget, Annadoah." + +"I cannot forget. Even as the ravens in their winter shelter dream of +the summer sun, so my soul grows warm, in all my loneliness, in the +memory of Olafaksoah." + +Ootah groaned with an access of misery. Frenziedly he caught her hands +and pressed them. Annadoah struggled. His words beat hotly in her +ears: + +"But I want thee. My blood burns at the thought of thee. It is +against the custom of the tribe that thou shouldst be alone. Thou must +take a husband." + +"No--no," she shook her head. + +"But some one must care for thee. I love thee. Thou wilt forget +Olafaksoah. Thy hurt will heal." + +Annadoah shook her head piteously. + +"Do the gulls that freeze to death in winter fly in springtime?" she +asked, simply. + +Ootah did not reply. + +"He was strong," she murmured. "His hands bruised me. He was cruel. +He hurt me. Yet he gave my heart joy. My heart is dying--dying as the +birds die. I feel the teeth of the wolves in my heart." + +Ootah pointed to the women. The soft crooning of their voices reached +him as they resumed the dismal dirge of their own woes. + +"They hate thee," he said. He pointed to the constellation of the +Great Bear which glittered faintly in the sky. "Yonder _qiligtussat_ +(the barking dogs) would rend the gentle bear. Thou rememberest the +old men's tale. A woman ran away from her family. She was false at +heart. The good mother bear protected her and gave her food. But +yearning for her husband, she returned and to gain his favor betrayed +the hiding place of the mother-bear and her young. Then the husband +drove out with sledges. His dogs attacked the bear. But they all +became stars and went up into the sky. Even as the bear was good to +the false woman so hast thou made clothing for those yonder, and now +they would as the dogs rend thee. Thou needest a husband." + +"They would be bitter to thee," she argued. + +"Perchance, but I would protect thee. I love thee." + +Annadoah shook her head. "The teeth of the wolves are in my heart," +she said. "And I no longer care." + +"Yonder _Nalagssartoq_ (he who waits and listens) bends to hear thy +reply." Ootah pointed to Venus, the brightest of the stars--to the +Eskimos an old man who waits by a blow-hole in the heavenly icefloes +and listens for the breathing of seals. "Thou wilt come to Ootah, who +loves thee? Answer, Annadoah! Ootah listens." + +He soothed her little hands. A wondrous light burned in his eyes. +Every fibre of his being yearned for her. But Annadoah's hands were +cold, her eyes were sullenly turned away. In her heart a vague fear of +him, a resentment of his very love, stirred. + +"My shadow yearns to the south," she repeated pathetically. "I shall +wait. Perhaps he will come as he said when the spring hunting sings." +In her heart she feared that he would not. + +Ootah in utter anguish dropped her hands. Annadoah sadly turned away. +Falling to his knees on the ice, he covered his face with his arms. +The sound of his heartbroken sobbing was drowned in the funereal chant +of the women as, in a long procession, they passed near him on their +way to the shore. + +When he raised his head, the rim of the moon, a great quarter-disc of +silver, peeped above the horizon. A mystical melancholy light flooded +the gloriously gleaming desolate white world. The ice floes glistened +as with the dust of diamonds. The ice covered faces of the +promontories glowed with the sheen of burnished metal. The clouds +became tremulous masses of argent phosphorescence. Far away the +women's chants subsided. One by one they joined the men in their +grotesque dances in the distant igloos. Ootah was left alone. + +He gazed long upon the pearly lamp of heaven. The subtle sorrow of +this world of magical moonlight filled his soul. Then the hopelessness +and tragedy of all it symbolized were unfolded to him, and, extending +his arms in a vague wild sympathy, in a vague wild despair, he moaned: + +"Desolate and lonely moon! Oh, desolate and unhappy moon! . . . +Desolate and unhappy is the heart of Ootah!" + +Far away, in her shelter, Annadoah heard the sobbing voice of Ootah. +And nearer, in an igloo where the men beat drums and danced, she heard +the voice of Maisanguaq laughing evilly. Of late Maisanguaq had gibed +her with her desertion; he was bitter toward her. But nothing mattered +to Annadoah. She thought of the blond man in the south, and the +pleading of Ootah. As she heard his weeping, she shook her head sadly. +She beat her breast and muttered over and over again: + +"Do the gulls that freeze to death in winter fly in springtime?" + + + + +V + +"_What they heard was, to them all, the Voice of the Great +Unknown, . . . He who made the world, created the Eternal Maiden +Sukh-eh-nukh, and placed all the stars in the skies . . . Whose voice, +far, far away, itself comes as the faintly remembered music of long +bygone dreams preceding birth . . . And now, out of the blue-black +sky, great globes of swimming liquid fire floated constantly, and +dispersing into feathery flakes of opal light, melted softly . . ._" + + +Ootah began work on an igloo for Annadoah. None of the tribesmen had +offered to do this for her, and, as only the men develop the +architectural skill required to construct a snow shelter, Annadoah, +until Ootah's return, was forced to continue to live in her seal-skin +tent, where she suffered bitterly from the cold. His back aching, +scarcely pausing to rest, Ootah constructed an icy dome of more than +usual solidity. This completed, he went many miles, through the +darkness, to the south, where, in the shelter of certain rocks, he knew +there was much soft moss. Digging through the frozen blanket of ice he +secured a quantity, and returning, made with it a soft bed for Annadoah +over a tier of stones. This he covered in turn with the soft skin of +caribou. Inside the immaculate house of snow he fashioned an interior +tent of heavy skins to retain the heat of the oil lamps. Of his own +supplies of blubber and walrus meat, which he had secretly buried early +in the hunting season and which had thus escaped the rapacity of the +white men, he gave more than half to Annadoah. He fixed her lamps with +oil, and arranged them solicitously in positions where they would give +most heat. He placed supplies in the house, and buried the rest +outside so that Annadoah might readily reach them. Meanwhile Annadoah +sat alone in her tent, her sad face buried in her hands, "her shadow +yearning toward the south." Many of the tribe, emerging from their +igloos, had paused to taunt Ootah at his labors. + +"A-ha--a-ha!" they laughed. "Thinkest thou that Annadoah will let thee +share her igloo when the snow closes in?" They laughed again. Ootah +seriously shook his head. + +"I would that Annadoah be protected from the storm," he said simply. + +"A-ha--ha! No man buildeth a house wherein he may not have shelter; no +man layeth a bed of soft moss whereon he doth not expect to lie. Idiot +Ootah, as well mayest thou expect the willows to sprout in the long +night--Annadoah thinketh naught of thee. Why seekest thou not a +sensible maiden?" + +"He hath given Annadoah half of his meat and fuel," the women murmured +complainingly among themselves. + +"He hath given her his skins; he hath thieved upon himself." + +"Why hath he not taken another to wife? Verily men are few; women are +many. And all gaze favorably upon Ootah." + +"Yea, his arm is strong." + +"There is courage in his heart." + +"He feareth not the night." + +"He should press his face upon the face of one who is fair; his wife +should bear children." + +When Annadoah passed from her tent into her new home the women scolded +her bitterly. The men goodnaturedly jeered Ootah. Annadoah huddled +near Ootah and gazed gratefully into his eyes. In the thought that he +was there to protect her the heart of Ootah pulsed with joy. +Annadoah's heart was cold. Annadoah sat inside the new little house of +snow, the oil lights flickering fitfully. In the dancing shadows +Annadoah saw the semblance of the form of the blond chief. Joylessly +Ootah built his own home. + +And in their houses, in celebration of the fall of night, the natives +continued their grotesque dances. Beating membrane drums, and singing +jerky chants, they danced frenziedly, forcing a false hilarity. They +felt the overwhelming approach of the dread spectre of famine. In +their dances some sobbed, others passed into uncontrollable hysteria. + +Ootah alone did not indulge in the fierce ceremonies. His own igloo +built, day after day, night after night, he sat alone. His heart ached +with the unrequited and eternal desire of all the loveless and lonely +things of the world. Outside, the moon increased in fulness and soared +in a low circle about the sky. The dogs crouched low on the ground, +howling dismally. + +During the first days of the long night the natives held a series of +dog fights inside the snow and stone houses. Ordinarily Ootah would +have attended these, for a dog fight is of keenest interest to a +tribesman, and the Eskimos' most exciting form of sport. + +To a hunter with healthy blood in his veins the dog encounter affords +the same thrills as other men, in more southern lands, find in bull +fights, horse racing, card playing and other games of chance. Two +lovers, both desirous of a maiden, may hold a fight between their king +dogs, each hoping that success may determine the girl's favor. Pieces +of blubber, animal skins, ivory carvings and less valuable objects are +often bet by the contestants and the onlookers. + +By all logical assumptions, one might naturally suppose that the +Eskimos--whose night is many months long--through many dark and +rigorous ages, would have developed into a taciturn and moody people, +just as the denizens of sunny climes are joyful, effervescent and +pleasure loving. However, this is not so. Troublous as is their +existence, they preserve until old age that playful joy of life, that +carefree ignoring of danger, which we find in our children--which, +alas, we lose too soon. Each day brings to them its novel delights; in +their monotonous foods they find a constant variety of pleasure; in +their simple games of muscle-tapping, throwing of carved ivories, and +fighting of dogs they experience the exultant and exuberant fun of our +schoolboys. Constant experience with jeopardous tasks has eliminated +the human fear of danger, and even death, in its most tragic shapes, by +long association has lost its terrors. When the long night falls, and +an ominous depression makes heavy the heart of the lover or fills with +anxiety the heart of the father, they turn, with a delightful +spontaneity, to play. + +Now great interest was aroused by the news that Papik was to fight his +king dog with the magnificent brute owned by Attalaq. Both Papik and +Attalaq were paying evident attentions to Ahningnetty, the chubby and +ever smiling maiden, who, while she showed a certain leaning toward +Papik, had misgivings as to his eligibility as a husband because of his +long fingers. + +Born of noted fighters, a dog attains the position of "king" or chief +dog of a team by whipping all the dogs in the team of his particular +master. When he has asserted his supremacy over the dogs of his own +team, he is successively set before the rulers of other teams. And by +a process of elimination of those which lose, the two final victors in +a village are finally aligned against one another. + +In the series of fights held between the king dogs of the various +teams, both Papik's and Attalaq's had come off with final honors. The +immediate contest between the two most distinguished canines in the +village was an event of exciting importance, and to the women there was +a romantic zest in it, for all believed that victory would determine +Ahningnetty's favor. + +At the time of the event all who could do so crowded into Attalaq's +stone house. In the centre of a tense group of onlookers the two dogs +were placed before each other. They were handsome animals, with long +keen noses, denoting an aristocracy of canine birth, and long shaggy +coats, mottled brown and white, as soft as silk. A long line of +victories lay to the credit of each. + +A sharp howl announced the fight--the two lithe bodies leaped +together--the air within the little circle became electric. The dogs +snapped, tumbled over each other. Their sharp teeth sank into each +other's shanks. The natives cheered whenever a favorite secured an +advantage. Bets were made. Papik's eyes gleamed as he alternately +watched his dog and the face of Ahningnetty as she peered interestedly +over the onlookers' shoulders. Attalaq's countenance was grim--not a +muscle moved. + +Finally Attalaq's dog, with a chagrined growl, unexpectedly rushed from +the enclosure and crouched in a corner of the igloo. + +The natives effusively gathered about Papik, who bent over his dog with +proud affection. In the excitement Ahningnetty quickly left the igloo, +and standing outside gazed meditatively at the stars. They hung in the +sky above like great pendulous jewels, palpitant with interior +name--there were purple stars, and blue stars, and orange-colored +stars; some resembled monstrous amethysts, some emeralds fierily green, +some rubies spitting sparks vindictively red; others globular sheeny +pearls, creamy of lustre but shot with faint gleams of rose; and +fugitively sprinkling the firmament here and there were orbs that +glistened like diamonds, wonderfully and purely white. Saturn, +distinct among all the heavenly bodies, throbbed with a van-colored +changing glow like a bulbous opal, and about it, with a strange +shimmer, visibly swirled its iridescent rings. + +"Thou standest alone--thou wouldst leave me?" Papik, eager, +triumphant, questioning, emerged from the stone entrance to the house +and approached the girl. The other natives, homeward bent, followed. + +The girl was silent. + +"Methought thou wouldst be glad----" + +"Thy dog is strong," the girl replied. + +"Dost thou love that dotard Attalaq?" + +"No," the maid replied. "He is clumsy as the musk ox." + +They turned, walking toward the igloo occupied by Ahningnetty and her +aged father. + +"Wilt thou not be Papik's wife?" Papik pleaded. "My shelter is +cold--little meat have I. The white men robbed the tribe. But +perchance the bears come--then I shall kill them; valiant is my dog." +He patted the animal's shaggy head. + +"But thy fingers, Papik--Papik! No--no!" + +"But Papik loves thee," he protested; "his skin flushes with the +thought of thee." + +"That thou didst also say to Annadoah, whom thou didst seek before me." + +Papik was silent; it was true that Ahningnetty was only a second choice. + +At that moment an ominous noise was heard on the sea. The tide, in +moving, caused the massive floe-ice to grate against that adhering to +the shore. To the simple natives, the noise indicated something more +sinister. + +"Hearest that?" Ahningnetty asked. + +"Yea," replied Papik, "_Qulutaligssuaq_, the monster who lives in the +sea, cometh with his hammers." + +"He cometh to steal the children. In winter he is very hungry." + +"They say he frightens people to death when a baby which is fatherless +screams." + +"And after he heats his ladles, the babies often die." + +Again the grating noise shuddered along the shore, and Ahningnetty, +frightened, fled to her house. Papik, pursuing his way, accosted Ootah. + +As they were speaking they saw Otaq and his wife emerge from their +house. Between them they carried a small stark body. The woman was +weeping piteously. It was their child, which a brief while before had +died. The sea monster had again claimed its human toll. + +Papik and Ootah disappeared--Papik to his shelter, Ootah to Annadoah's +igloo. The parents, left alone, dug up stones and ice and buried the +child. Then beneath the stars they stood in silent grief. Other +natives, emerging from their houses and seeing them, understood and +disappeared, for while relatives weep over their dead none dare disturb +their mourning. For five days, in commemoration of the death, the +parents would visit the grave of their child, During this time no +native dare cross the path leading from their igloo to the silent +resting place, and while they stood beneath the stars all alien to +their sorrow must remain within their houses. Only the Great Spirit, +who lives beyond the golden veils of the boreal lights, may hear the +sobbing of a stricken human creature over the thing of which it has +been bereft. + +In the course of ten sleeps--as days are called--the first moon of the +long night sank below the horizon and the colorful stars fierily +glittered over a world of black silence. The cold increased to an +intolerable bitterness. Ootah, venturing from his igloo to dig up +walrus meat, found the earth frozen so solid that it split his steel +axe. + +It was not long before many white mounds appeared beneath the liquid +stars. The old and the very young, unable to endure the rigorous cold +and dearth of food, passed into the mysterious unknown of which the +long dark of earth is only the portal. After the passing of the first +moon the storms came; the sky blackened; the winds voiced the desolate +woe of millions of aerial creatures. Terrific snow storms kept the +tribe within their shelters for days. Often the winds tore away the +membrane windows of their snow houses, and blasts of frigid cold +dissipated the precious warmth within. In the lee of circular walls of +ice, right at the immediate entrance of the houses, the natives kept +their dogs. Inside they had only room for the mother dogs, which at +this period brought into being litters of beautiful little puppies with +which the Eskimo children played. Outside, scores of splendid animals, +which could not be sheltered, were frozen to death in great drifts. +These, during the following days, were dug out and used as food both +for men and the living animals. + +During a quiet period between storms, Ootah, venturing from his +shelter, heard a shuffling noise near his igloo. In the northern sky a +creamy light palpitated, and in one of the quick flares he saw a bear +nosing about the village. He called his dogs and they soon surrounded +the animal. Fortunately the incandescent light of the aurora +increased--now and then a ribbon of light, palpitant with every color +of the rainbow, was flung across the sky. Ootah lifted his harpoon +lance--the sky was momentarily flooded with light--he struck. In the +next flare he saw the bear lying on the ice--his lance had pierced the +brute's heart. Attracted by the barking of Ootah's dogs, several +tribesmen soon joined him in dressing the animal. During their task, +one suddenly beckoned silence, and whispered softly: + +"The Voice . . . the Voice . . ." And they paused. + +A weird whistling sound sang eerily through the skies. The air, +electrified, seemed to snap and crackle. It was the voice that comes +with the aurora. + +The knives fell from the natives' hands. The howling of the hungry +dogs was stilled. In hushed awe, in reverence, with vague wondering, +they listened. Ootah was on his knees. An inspired light transfigured +his face. His pulses thrilled. For what they heard was, to them all, +the Voice of the Great Unknown, He whose power is greater than that of +_Perdlugssuaq_, He who made the world, created the Eternal Maiden +_Sukh-eh-nukh_, and placed all the stars in the skies, who, never +coming Himself earthward, instead sends in the aurora His spirits with +messages of hope and encouragement to men, and Whose Voice sometimes, +far, far away, itself comes as the faintly remembered music of long +by-gone dreams preceding birth . . . Yea, it was the Voice . . . the +Voice . . . + +And now, out of the black-blue sky, as if released from invisible +hands, great globes of swimming liquid fire floated constantly, and +dispersing into millions of feathery flakes of opal light, melted +softly . . . Along the lower heavens there was a fugitive flickering +of a rich creamy light, as of the reflection of celestial fires far +beyond the horizon. + +Speechless, Ootah viewed the flameous wonder, and, although he knew no +prayer, he felt in his soul an instinctive love, a profound awe . . . +In the silent sanctity of that auroral-shot and frigidly glorious +region he seemed to feel the pulsing of an Unseen Presence--a presence +of which he was a part, of which, with a glow, he felt the soul of her +he loved was a part, to which all nature, everything that lives and +breathes, was vitally linked . . . He felt the drawing urge, the +thrilling tingling impetus, as it were, of the terrific currents of +vital spirit force that sweep vastly through the universe, keeping the +earth and all the planets in their orbits . . . He felt, what possibly +the primitive and pure of heart feel most keenly . . . the presence of +the Great Unknown, He who is the fountain source of love, and whose +hands on the sable parchment of the northern skies perchance write, in +irid traceries of fire, mystic messages of hope which none, of all +humanity, during all the centuries, has ever learned entirely to +understand. + +Not until the wonder lights were fading did the tribesmen take up the +precious bear meat, and according to Ootah's instructions divide +portions among the community. His arm full of meat, Ootah joyously +entered Annadoah's igloo. + +Annadoah, sad and lonely, sat by her lamp. Her igloo was like that of +all the others. Inside, so as to retain the heat and carry off the +water which dripped from the melting dome of snow, there was an +interior tent of seal skin. In a great pan of soapstone was a line of +moss, which absorbed the walrus fat, and served as a wick for the lamp. +This emitted a line of thin, reddish blue flame. Over the light, and +supported by a framework, was a large soapstone pot in which bits of +walrus meat were simmering. By the side of the pot a large piece of +walrus blubber hung over a rod. In the heat of the lamp this slowly +exuded a thick oil which, falling into the pan below and saturating the +moss wick, gave a constant and steady supply of fuel. + +Like the other women, Annadoah sat by her lamp day after day. When she +could endure hunger no longer she would eat ravenously of the meagre +food in the pot. Regular meals are unknown in the arctic--a native +abstains from food as long as he can in days of famine, but when he +eats he eats unstintedly. + +As Ootah entered the low enclosure Annadoah's eyes lighted. + +Ootah told her of the bear encounter, and, with the joy of children, +they placed bits of the meat in the pot and sat by, delightedly +inhaling the odor as it cooked. + +Several days later, while they were eating the last remainder of the +meat, both heard an uproar outside. They crept from the igloo and +discovered most of the village assembled without. + +"Attalaq hath carried off Ahningnetty," one told them. + +"He broke into her father's house and seized her with violence!" + +Not far away they heard Ahningnetty's screams. + +"Attalaq is strong," said one. + +"Yea, as a boy did he not kill his brother?" All remembered the brutal +encounter of the two brothers years before, when, throwing him to the +ground, Attalaq jumped on his brother's body and striking his head with +stones beat him to death. Attalaq was a type of the older warriors; +unlike his more gentle tribesmen he possessed the atavistic savagery of +his forebears of centuries ago when it was customary to abduct brides. + +An excited crowd gathered outside of Attalaq's house. Soon Attalaq +himself appeared. He was exultant. + +"Ha! Ha!" he laughed. "Methinks that is the way to treat a woman!" +Then with swollen-up gusto he told them all about it. Tiring of being +alone he determined to carry off Ahningnetty. "A woman's mind is as +the wind--it constantly changeth," he said. "Women should be driven as +the dogs." Ahningnetty, still weeping, still protesting, came to the +door. Attalaq turned fiercely upon her and struck her in the face. +Then he laughed again. The girl screamed. + +"Well," he said, turning to her. "I carried thee here--if thou wouldst +return thou canst walk back. Eh?" The girl cowered away, but on her +face there was the semblance of a pleased expression. The other women +regarded her with a tinge of envy. + +"'Tis not often in these days a lover careth sufficiently to carry a +maid away," said an aged crone. + +"In the days of old there were men like Attalaq," said a younger woman, +admiringly. + +"Where is Papik?" one asked. He was not to be seen. + +"Dost thou not wish to return to thy father?" Annadoah asked +Ahningnetty, approaching her. + +The girl shook her head. Much as she had protested, she was +unquestionably pleased by the forcible abduction. + +One of the gossips, desiring to impart the unpleasant news to Papik, +had gone to his house. + +"Papik sits alone," she called, on her return. "And when I told him +Ahningnetty hath been carried away by Attalaq, he replied, ''Tis well! +'Tis well!' And then he showed me his hands--they were frozen--frozen! +Verily, he would now be a sorry husband to provide for a wife." + +"Papik's fingers frozen!" took up the others. "Unhappy Papik." + +"He sobs and weeps--he sobs and weeps," said the old woman. "He saith +the dreaded misfortune hath come, and the days of his skill on the hunt +are over!" + +"Long fingers, short hunt; long nose--short life," remarked Maisanguaq, +sententiously. + +Attalaq, happy in his conquest, was broad enough to be generous. He +declared that Papik should never want as long as he could shoot the +arrow. Generous-hearted, many of the others joined in and bits of +blubber were soon offered the lonely Papik, as he sat, nursing his +frozen members, in his house. The mishap was tragic, for, his hands +injured, he had lost not only his skill in the hunt but his ability to +protect himself in case of accidents. And from the experience of ages +all knew that, sooner or later, he was doomed to a comparatively early +death. + +During the first period of the night, and after Ootah's first capture, +several prowling bears were shot. The howl of occasional wolves was +heard in the mountains; then all the bears disappeared, the hunger of +the wolves was stilled. + +When the third moon rose not a thing stirred outside the igloos. A +glacial silence gripped the northern world. In their shelters the +natives clustered together, warming one another with their breathing +and the heat of their bodies. They lacked the courage even to speak. + +Day by day their supply of food had run low. Day by day they decreased +their portions; their cheeks sunk, hunger burned in their eyes. To +save the precious fuel they burned only one lamp in their houses; they +were unable to sleep because of the intense cold. Finally their food +gave out. From his store Ootah silently doled out allotments until +starvation confronted him. One by one the dogs were eaten. And this +caused a dull ache, for the men loved their dogs only a little less +than they did their wives and children. The quaking fear of the long +hours slowly gave way to a dull lethargy. In their igloos, where +single lamps smoked, they sat, and to keep up their circulation and to +prevent themselves from falling into a coma, they rocked their bodies +like things only half alive. + +The black days and black nights slowly, tediously, achingly passed. +One day was like another--one night seemed to mark no progress of time. +Only the children, to whom parents gave the last bits of food, showed +some animation. They played listlessly with one another. For toys +they had crude carvings of soapstone--tiny soapstone lamps and pots +with which they made pitiful mimicry of cooking. The little girls +played with crude dolls just as do little girls in more southern +lands--but they were grotesque effigies, made of skin roughly sewn +together. The boys found brief zest in a game which was played by +sticking ivory points in a piece of bone, hanging from the roof of the +igloo, and which was perforated with holes. Finally, as the night wore +on, the children lost interest in their games, and with aching +stomachs, lay silent by the fires. Starvation steadily claimed its +toll. Death, slowly, surely, laid its grim and terrible hands upon +that pitiful fringe of earth's humanity on the desolate star-litten +roof of the world. One by one a stark body would be carried from an +igloo into the black, bitter cold silence without and buried under +blocks of snow. And above, intense and incandescent, the Pole +Star--that unerring time mark of God's inevitable and unerring +laws--burned like an all-seeing, sentient and pitiless eye of fire in +the heavens. + + +Annadoah lay upon her couch of furs. Her face was thin, and white as +the snows without. The flame in her stone lamp was about to flicker +into extinction. + +Ootah, entering the igloo, sprang quickly to her side. Her breath came +very faintly. He seized her hands. He breathed on her face. He +opened her ahttee and rubbed her little breasts. He felt something +very strange, and wonderful, stirring within him. And with it a +ghastly fear that the thing he loved was dying. + +Into the lamp he placed the last meagre bits of remaining blubber. +Then he again set to chafing the tender little hands. Cold and hunger +had wrought havoc upon Annadoah. Ootah's heart ached. + +Finally her eyelids stirred. Her lips parted. A smile brightened her +face. Ootah leaned forward, breathlessly. Her lips framed an +inaudible word: + +"Olafaksoah . . . Olafaksoah . . ." She opened her eyes. The smile +faded. "Thou . . . ?" she said. + +"Yea, Annadoah, I have brought thee food," Ootah said. It was his last. + +"I hunger," she breathed. "It is very cold . . . I was in the +south . . . where the sun is warm . . . it is very cold here." + +Eagerly he pressed her hands. She drifted again into a stupor and for +a long while was silent. Ootah's warm panting breath finally brought +blood to her cheeks. + +"Thou art so big . . . and strong . . ." she smiled again. "Thy arms +hurt me . . . as the embrace of _nannook_ (the bear). . . ." Her smile +deepened . . . her breath came more quickly. "Oh, oh, it is +pleasant . . . here . . . in . . . the south." + +"Annadoah!" Ootah's wail of hurt recalled her. + +Her eyes sought the igloo wonderingly. + +"Thou?" she repeated, dully. "Yea, it is cold here. I am hungry . . . +Are there not _ahmingmah_ in the mountains, Ootah? Didst thou not tell +me there were _ahmingmah_ in the mountains . . . why do not the men of +the tribe seek the musk oxen in the mountains?" + +With a sudden start Ootah remembered having told Annadoah of the herd +he had found in the inland valley--it was strange, he thought, he had +not remembered the herd before. And it was stranger still that now she +should remind him. But the improbability of ever reaching the game, +the obvious impossibility of such a journey at this time of winter, had +prevented any such suggestion. + +"Many musk oxen are there in the mountains," he said, soothing her +hands. She drew them away. "And thou art hungry . . ." + +"I am hungry," she replied, faintly. + +After he had given her the last bit of meat he left her igloo. Above +him the stars burned, the air was clear and still. Not a thing moved, +not a sound was heard--the earth was gripped in that unrelenting spell +of wintry silence. Above the imprisoned sea the January moon was +rising and for ten sleeps--ten twenty-four hour days--it would circle +about the horizon of the entire sky. Already the sky above the sea was +bright as a frosted globe of glass, and pearly fingers of light were +stealing upward over the interior mountains. + +"She is hungry," Ootah repeated over and over again. "And the tribe +starves . . . and there may be _ahmingmah_ in the mountains." Behind +him they loomed, gigantic and precipitous. That such a journey meant +almost certain death he knew; but that did not deter him in the resolve +to essay a feat no native had ever dared in many hundreds of years. + + +The face of Sipsu, the _angakoq_, as I have said, resembled dried and +wrinkled leather. He had been an old man when the eldest of the tribe +were children. He had seen hard times, he had suffered from starvation +during many winters; yet never even in his experience had the lashes of +_ookiah_ struck so blastingly upon the tribe. Yea, they had even lost +their fear of the _tornarssuit_ and no longer brought propitiatory +offerings of blubber to him. Yet being wise with age, early in the +summer he had buried sufficient supplies beneath the floor of his house +to keep him from starving. He scowled maliciously as he heard someone +creeping through the underground entrance of his igloo. Presently the +cadaverous face of Maisanguaq appeared. + +The interior was heavy with the stench of oil. The room hung with soot +from the lamp. A thin spiral thread of black smoke rose from the +taper. In the dim light the leering face of Sipsu appeared like the +face of the great demon himself. His small half-closed eyes blazed +through their slits. + +"The spirits are wrathful. The tribe is forgetful. What wilt thou +have?" + +Maisanguaq, with unconcealed hesitation, placed a bit of blubber before +the magician. + +"The last I have," he mumbled. Sipsu seized it avidly. + +"Ootah goeth to the mountains," Maisanguaq said, panting for breath. + +The old man sneered bitterly: + +"He cannot brave the spirits. No man can live in the mountains. The +breath of the spirits is death." + +"Yea, he goeth. He says that he knows where the _ahmingmah_ abound. +The air is still; the moon rises for ten sleeps. By then, so he saith, +he can return with meat." + +"No man hath ever ventured there. The shadow of _Perdlugssuaq_ is very +dark." + +"Yea, may he smite Ootah!" exclaimed Maisanguaq. + +Sipsu laughed harshly. + +"Couldst thou cause the hill spirits to strike?" Maisanguaq asked +eagerly. + +Sipsu faced Maisanguaq fiercely. + +"In my youth I went unto the mountains and I heard the hill spirits +sing. Thereupon I became a great magician. They spoke to me; I was +silent; thereafter, when I called they answered. What wouldst thou?" + +Maisanguaq indicated the blubber. + +"I would thou call them now; that they release the glaciers, that Ootah +may be carried to his death. I hate Ootah, I would that he die." He +shook his fist. + +Sipsu's body quivered from head to foot. "Ootah hath never consulted +my familiar spirits," he rejoined bitterly. "He despiseth them." + +Rising from his sitting posture Sipsu seized his drum and began moving +his body. He groaned with extreme pain. By degrees his dance +increased. He improvised a monotonous spirit song. His face grimaced +demoniacally. As his conjuration approached the climax, his voice rose +to a series of shrieks. He shuddered violently; he seemed to suffer +agonies in his limbs. Finally he fell to the floor in a writhing +paroxysm. + +"_Pst_!" Maisanguaq's eyes lighted. + +Outside he heard the sharp barking of dogs. "_Huk_! _Huk_!" Ootah's +voice called. Others joined in the clamor. The entire tribe seemed to +wake as from a sleep of the dead. + +"He starts for the mountains," said Maisanguaq. "Thinkest thou the +spirits will strike?" + +Sipsu opened his eyes--and glared wildly at Maisanguaq. + +"Speak," Maisanguaq demanded. "Hast thou not the power?" + +"Did I not once go to the bottom of the sea to _Nerrvik_, she who rules +over the sea creatures? Hath she not only one hand, and is she not +powerless to plait her hair? Doth she not obey me? For did I not +plait her hair? Did I not carry wood for weapons to the spirits of the +mountains? And have they not answered for nigh a thousand moons?" + +"Yet there is doubt in thy voice, Sipsu!" + +"Yea, to be truthful with thee, Maisanguaq, there is dispute among the +spirits. I cannot determine what they say." He bent his head as if +listening. Then he asked: + +"Doth Ootah not go that Annadoah may have food?" + +Maisanguaq nodded assent. + +"And the tribe?" + +Maisanguaq again nodded. + +As though he suddenly heard some terrifying converse among his +familiars the necromancer's face blanched. He struggled to his feet. + +"Take thy food," he flung the blubber to Maisanguaq. "I dare not take +thy gift. I am afraid." + +Maisanguaq sprang at the old man. "Revoke not thy curse," he breathed, +his fingers sinking into the _angakoq's_ throat. "Will the hill +spirits strike?" + +"Yea," the old man gasped, "but they say----" + +Maisanguaq's fingers loosened. "What?" he demanded. + +"That there is . . . some other power . . . which is very +strange--which----" + +"Yea, yea----" + +"Protecteth Ootah . . . It concerneth . . . Annadoah. I do not wish +thy gift. I fear the spirits. The magic of Ootah--what it is . . . I +cannot tell thee . . . But the spirits say . . . it . . . +concerneth . . . Annadoah. And against it none of the _tornarssuit_ +can prevail." Maisanguaq threw the old man fiercely to the floor and, +disgusted, left the igloo. + + +Outside, the entire tribe, with the exception of those dying of hunger, +had gathered in groups. Ootah lifted his whip. His team of eight lean +dogs howled. + +"_Tugto_! _Tugto_!" he called. The dogs leaped into the air--his sled +shot forward. Ootah strode forward. + +In his desperate adventure Ootah was joined by one of the younger +members of the tribe, Koolotah by name, a lad barely eighteen years of +age. All the others had hung back. Koolotah's mother was dying; a +desperate desire to save her stirred in his heart as he lifted his whip +in the signal to start. The tribe cheered. + +"_Huk_! _Huk_!" he shouted, and his lean dogs followed Ootah's team. + +"_Au-oo-au-oo_!" called the natives. + +"_Auoo-auoo_!" the voices of Ootah and Koolotah returned. + +Over the snow-covered stretch of level shoreland the moon poured a +flood of silver incandescence. In this magical light the forms of +Ootah and his companion were magnified into the likeness of those of +the giants that the old men said once lived in the highlands. Their +dogs were distended into creatures of the size of musk oxen. Their +whips exploded as they dashed past the straggling line of snow and +stone houses; the snow crisply cracked and splintered under their feet. + +Then the village disappeared behind them. The voices of their +tribesmen trailed shudderingly into silence. + +The assembled tribe watched the teams diminishing in the distance. +Presently someone whispered a terrible thing. + +"Sipsu hath cursed Ootah." + +A low ominous murmur passed from lip to lip among the gathered men and +women. In the distance a black speck in the moonlight marked the +departing hunters. + +"Yea, he hath called upon the spirit of the mountains to destroy Ootah." + +A low groan followed this. + +"Methinks he hath prophesied too many deaths," said Arnaluk. + +"He hath declared that Koolotah's mother will die." + +"And Koolotah--did he not say two moons ago that Koolotah would depart +on a long journey from which he should never return?" + +"And the wife of Kyutah--did she not perish after his evil prophesy? +And Piuaitsoq--did not the spirit of the skin tents strike him when he +lay asleep? And did not yon evil wretch tell of it long before?" + +A dozen voices angrily rose in assent. + +"Verily he hath found hatred in his heart for Ootah. For Ootah hath +had no need of his powers. Did not Ootah's mother sew into his cap the +skin from the roof of a bear's mouth? And hath he not become as strong +as the bear? Did not his father place in his _ahttee_ the feet of a +hawk--and have not his own feet the swiftness of the wings of a bird? +And doth not Sipsu hate him for his strength? Yea, as he hateth all +who are young, who are brave, and who find joy in their shadow." + +Their voices rose threateningly. Maisanguaq, chagrined and bitter at +the old man, leered among the crowd. + +"Hath he not lived too long," he whispered softly. And the others +suddenly shouted: + +"Let Sipsu die!" + +In a wild rush they bore down upon the _angakoq's_ igloo. Screaming +with rage they kicked in the sides. The icy dome shattered about the +startled old man. They leaped upon him as hungry dogs upon a dying +bear. A dozen hands ferociously gripped his throat. They moved to and +fro in a mad struggle over the uneven ice. They seized hold of one +another in the blood-thirsty desire to lay their hands upon the old +man. He made no struggle. Finally all drew away. Amid the wreck of +his igloo Sipsu lay, motionless, his face sneering evilly in the +moonlight. His dead lips seemed to frame a curse. + +They secured a rope of leather lashings and placed a noose about the +old man's neck. Then they dragged his body from the wrecked igloo. +Weak from lack of food, they still forced themselves to dig up the +frozen snow at a spot where they knew there were stones, for according +to their belief they had to bury the old man--otherwise, his spirit +would haunt them. To this spot they brought the rotted skins of his +bed, and on them placed the body, fearful lest they touch it. By the +body they placed the old man's lamp, stone dishes, membrane-drum and +instruments of incantation. Over the corpse they piled the ice +encrusted stones, and over these in turn weighty masses of frozen snow. +Then they turned in silence and entered their respective shelters. +Thenceforth, until a child should be born to whom it could be given, +the name of Sipsu might not pass their lips. + + + + +VI + +"_As he looked upon the descending wraiths, Koolotah saw they had the +spirit-semblance of gleaming faces, and that their eyes burned, through +the enveloping cloud-veils, like fire . . . 'The dead--the dead . . .' +he said, 'we have come into a land of the dead.' . . . + +"Then the glacial mountainside to which he clung trembled . . . the +silver-swimming world of white dust-driven fire became suddenly +black--and the earth seemed removed from under him . . ._" + + +Leaving the low-lying shore, Ootah's path led up through a narrow gorge +between two great cliffs. Since he had returned from the mountains the +path had been covered by many successive falls of snow. At places the +path sloped abruptly downward at a terrible angle, and the ice cracked +and slid beneath the hardy hunters' feet. With the agility of cats, +the dogs fastened their claws into the ice and climbed upward. + +Constantly the two men had to hold to the jagged rocks to their right, +otherwise, time after time, they would have slipped into the perilous +abyss below. Through the chasm the moon poured its liquid rays. At +certain points towering crags shut off the light--then Ootah and his +companion had to feel their way slowly upward in the dark. Finally +Ootah's dogs, with a loud chorus of barking, leaped ahead. Seizing an +overhanging ledge of rock Ootah lifted himself to the top of the +precipice. Koolotah's team followed. + +For interminable miles a vast icy plateau stretched before them--a +plain glistening with snow and reflecting like a burnished mirror the +misty silveriness of the moon. Over the glacial expanse an eerily +greenish phosphorescence, which palpitated and shifted at times with +vivid splashes of opal and deeper tones of burning blue, hung low. + +The upland was split with thousands of canyons that writhed over the +white expanse like snakes in tortuous convulsions. From these +bottomless abysses arose a luminous amethystine vapor. In the depths +jutting icicles took fire and glowed through the lustrous mists like +burning eyes. Where the chasms joined with others or widened, ominous +shapes, swathed in wind-blown blackish-purple robes, with extended +arms, took form. As Ootah and Koolotah dashed forward, great spaces of +clear ice palpitated on all sides of them with interior opaline fires. + +Neither spoke. Holding the rear framework of their sleds, they trusted +to the instinct of their dogs. Mile after mile swept under their feet. +Their road often lay along the very edges of purple-black abysses. The +echoes of their sharp gliding sleds cutting the ice, of the very patter +of their dogs' feet, were magnified in volume in the clear air, and it +seemed as though, in the hollow depths on every side, ghostly teams +were following. Koolotah was white with fear. But Ootah encouraged +him onward. + +They paced off twenty miles. They reached an altitude of more than a +thousand feet above the sea. + +The great moon slowly circled about the sky; the scurrying clouds +contorted like grotesque living things. + +The two hunters made precipitous descents over unexpected frozen +slopes--at times it seemed as though they were about to be hurled to +instantaneous death. Yet Ootah steeled his heart. His teeth chattered +but he gritted them firmly. + +"Annadoah needeth food," he murmured, "and----" + +His eyes shone, a new pity not unmingled with a taint of bitterness +filled his heart. Annadoah must live; she must have food. For a +strange thing, he observed, had come upon her. Her inexplicable moods, +her brief moments of tenderness, her riotous griefs, and other +prefigurements of maternity--these made her dearer to Ootah. So he +vigorously cracked his whip and urged the dogs. + +The chasms twisted with lifelike motion all around him. Behind, as in +a dream, Ootah heard the whip of Koolotah, and the barking of +Koolotah's dogs. For hours his feet moved swiftly and mechanically +under him. Once his foot slipped. He swerved to the right. A vast +black mouth yawned hungrily to receive him; then it closed behind him. +The leaping team of dogs had pulled him forward. Luckily he maintained +a tenacious hold to the rear upstander of his sled. + +Narrow chasms constantly cut their trail. With sharp howls the dogs +leaped over these, the sleds passed safely, and by instinct Ootah would +bound forward. Narrower than a man's stride in width, Ootah knew these +slits in the glacial ice were hundreds of feet in depth, that a slip of +the foot might plunge him to immediate death. Now and then he lost his +footing on the uneven ice; his heart leaped for fear, but he held +grimly to the sledge and the lithe, lean but strong dog-bodies carried +him to safety. These faithful animals bounded over the glimmering ice +field with amazing speed. They snapped and barked with the joy of the +race. In the white moonlight the vapor of their breathing enveloped +them like a silvery cloud. + +For hours the hunters continued the trail. Their mighty purpose fought +off fatigue. The moon passed behind cumulous mountains of clouds along +the horizon, and periods of darkness blotted the world from Ootah. +Then they traveled in darkness. A chill dampness rising from the +gaping abysses that sundered the ice field told them of their danger; +then Ootah's heart chilled, his teeth were set chattering; but he +thought of Annadoah and the grim need of food, and he gripped the +upstander of his sled more determinedly. When the moon again unclosed +its pearly sheen over the ice, the serpentine chasms moved their +tortuous backs and writhed about them, the icy hummocks billowed, and +the glittering ice-peaked horizon swam in a dizzy circle of diamonded +light. + +As their trail ascended higher the penetrating cold dampness somewhat +moderated. In the taut air the sound of their whips was like that of +splitting metal. Shuddering and sepulchral echoes answered the barking +of their dogs. The faithful ghosts of the dogs of fallen hunters were +following their departed masters in the amethystine mists of the +canyons about them. Ootah and Koolotah trembled with the thought of +the dreadful nearness of the dead. Believing other animals to be +ahead, the dogs set up a wilder, shriller howling. Then the echoes +came back with more startling and terrifying proximity. Ootah's flesh +crept. Finally, with an explosive sound, Koolotah let his whip fall. + +"_Aulate_--halt!" he called. + +They came to a dead standstill. + +"_Pst_!" he whispered. He hit the snapping, whining dogs. "_Pst_!" +They crouched to the ground and whined mournfully. + +"Dost thou hear?" Koolotah asked in a hushed voice. In the moonlight +Ootah saw that the lad's face was as white as the face of the dead, and +that in his eyes was a wild fear. From the mountain ridges, which +loomed beyond, came an ominous noise--resembling a low wind. Ootah +bent his head and listened to the sobbing monotone, then whispered: + +"The breathing of the spirits of the hills who sleep." + +"Perchance we waken them," Koolotah ventured. + +"That would be bad," Ootah replied. + +"I have left my mother forever," Koolotah wailed. + +"Be brave, lad; they need food; beseech the spirits of those who lived +when men's sap was stronger, thy ancestors, for strength. Come!" + +Koolotah raised his head--then uttered a low cry of alarm. He drew +back, fearfully, pointing with a trembling arm to the mountain pass +ahead. + +Covered with glacial snow and ice the slopes of the first ridge of the +interior mountains gleamed with frosted silver. Over the white +expanse, formed by the countless clefts and indentations of the slope, +cyclopean shadows took form, and like eldritch figures joining their +hands in a wild dance, loomed terrifyingly before the two men. Their +trail now ascended through a gorge which abruptly opened immediately +before them. Into this rugged chasm the argent moonlight poured, and +from unseen caverns in the pass glowered monstrous phosphorescent green +and ruby eyes. + +From the heights above fragments of clouds descended through the chasm. +In the full moonlight they were transformed into tall aerial beings, of +unearthly beauty. They were swathed in luminous robes that fluttered +gently upon the air, and like the birds they soared, with tremulous +wings resembling films of silver. They moved softly, with great +majesty. As he looked upon the descending wraiths, Koolotah saw they +had the spirit-semblance of gleaming faces, and that their eyes burned, +through the enveloping cloud-veils, like fire. He drew back, afraid. + +"The dead . . ." he murmured . . . "We have come unto the land of the +dead." + +Both stood in silence, reverent, awed, half-afraid. + +Then Ootah snapped his whip. He called to the dogs. + +"Let us go unto them . . . Let us show that men are not afraid. +_Huk_! _Huk_! _Huk_! Come!" + +The dogs howled, the traces tightened, the sleds sped forward. They +entered the defile. The trail twisted up the side of the abyss. Less +than three feet wide for long stretches, the dogs had to slacken and +pass upward in line, one by one. Covered with new ice it was +dangerously slippery, and in climbing the men had to hold to jutting +icicles for support. + +Ootah was ahead. At times sheer walls of ice confronted him. At +certain places there had been drifts, at others glacial fragments had +slipped from the mountain above. Before these almost insuperable walls +Ootah would pause and with his axe hew steps in the hard ice. + +They slowly toiled ahead for an hour. Then a blank sloping ice wall, +twice the height of Ootah, blocked the path. He grasped his axe and +began hewing a series of ascending steps. He breathed with difficulty; +the air in the high altitude made respiration difficult. He was soon +bathed in perspiration. The moisture of his breath and beads of sweat +froze about his face, covering him with an icy mask. His eyelashes +froze together. He had to pause to melt the quickly congealing tears. +He suffered unendurably. Finally his axe split; the ice was harder +than his steel. He uttered an impatient exclamation. + +"Thy axe!" he called to Koolotah. + +Koolotah swung his axe in the air and over the dog team separating +them. Ootah leaped from his feet and caught the axe as it soared above +him. In a half hour the step-like trail was cut, and he clambered over +the wall. Digging their nails into the indentations, the dogs +followed. Then Koolotah and his team scaled the obstruction. + +Koolotah felt his heart choking him as it seemed to enlarge within; +Ootah, in truth, was not entirely unafraid. Both knew that a slip of +the foot would plunge them to instant death. As they ascended the +trail, the gathering clouds surrounded them. They could no longer see +their dogs. They could not even perceive the blackness of the chasm to +their right. Above and below they were enveloped in a silver mist. +Only the reflected glitter of the moonlight on jutting icicles on the +opposite indicated the depths so perilously near. Through the mist +Koolotah saw the green and crimson eyes of baleful creatures that +might, at any moment, spring upon him. + + +When they reached the inland valley they were both spent in strength. +In sheer relief from the agonized suspense of the journey they sank on +their sledges and lay palpitating for an hour or more. But the cold +froze their perspiring garments and they had to rise and exercise so as +not to freeze to death. Ootah knew that no time could be lost. In the +interior mountains the breathing of the hill spirits was becoming more +uneasy. And Ootah noted with anxiety the increasing moderation of the +atmosphere. That was not well. When the cold relented the hill +spirits released the glaciers. + +With frantic eagerness they explored the valley. The green grass +whereon Ootah had seen the splendid animals grazing months before was +covered with ice. There was no sign of the _ahmingmah_. Ootah's heart +sank. He felt very much like weeping. + +Suddenly the dogs began to sniff the air and bark hungrily. + +"_Ahmingmah_!" Koolotah cried, joyfully. + +Ootah released the team--the dogs made a misty black streak in their +dash over the ice. The men followed. + +In the shelter of a cave they found five musk oxen. They were huddled +together and half numb with cold. They roared dully as the howling +dogs assaulted them, and rushed lumberingly from the cave into the +moonlight. Five great black hulks, with mighty manes of coarse hair, +they ambled over the ice for a space of five hundred feet and then, +surrounded by the dogs, assembled in a circle, their backs together, +their heads facing the howling dogs. Thus they were prepared to +protect themselves from attack. + +The dogs, frantic with hunger, made fierce rushes at the animals. Now +and then, as the dogs dashed forward, one of the great beasts would +charge, its head lowered, and the dogs would leap backward into the air +and scatter. Then turning, the animal would rush back to its +companions as fast as its numbed legs could carry it. + +Through the white vapor of their breath, which half hid their great +horned heads, Ootah could see the eyes of the musk-oxen--they were +greenish and phosphorescent. Occasionally the creatures roared +sullenly, but the fight was less exciting than it would have been had +they been less torpid from hunger and cold. + +Ootah called away the dogs, and raised his gun, one which Olafaksoah, +in payment for the five sledloads of walrus blubber which he +confiscated after Ootah's flight to the mountains, had left with a +generous supply of ammunition with a companion. Ootah now realized the +value of the payment which he had scorned. + +There was a yellow flash in the moonlight--a mighty roar went up. The +dogs, with a cyclonic dash, swooped upon the fallen monster, snapping +viciously at it as it roared in its death agony. Frightened, the other +four scattered--one rushed into the shelter of the cave, the other +three, dispersing, soon became diminishing black specks in the +moonlight. The dogs would have followed, but Ootah called them back. +One animal was even more than they could manage. + +With quick despatch they fell upon the animal with their knives. +Neither spoke--they worked breathlessly. With marvellous skill they +peeled off the heavy skin, and with amazing dexterity carved great +masses of bleeding meat clean from the bones. When they had finished, +only a great skeleton remained. Outside the cave, eager, whining, the +starving dogs obediently crouched. When they had completed the task of +dressing, Ootah lifted his hand and the canines, with howling avidity, +fell upon the steaming mass of entrails. + +Upon the two sledges the hunters loaded and lashed securely their +treasure of meat. In the moonlight the hot steam rose from the +tremulous masses and Ootah's nostrils dilated with eager, anticipatory +delight. The blood dripped upon the snow and Ootah's stomach ached. +He had not dared to think of eating until now. Their hands shaking +with nervous hunger, the two fell upon the remaining meat. They +feasted with that savage hungry joy known only to human creatures who +have faced starvation. When they started on the return journey there +was a new vibrant elasticity in their steps. + +Ootah snapped his whip and sang. + +And his heart sang, too, of Annadoah. + +Looking at the clouds, as they drifted through the valley, Ootah +imagined he saw Annadoah lying upon her couch asleep, and in the faint +light of an oil lamp he saw upon her face a pleased smile. + +"Of what doth Annadoah dream?" Ootah asked the winds. + +"Of springtime when the flowers bloom," the winds replied. + +"And Annadoah will move to a new skin tent with Ootah!" he said, +joyously, exultantly. "Ootah will bring food unto Annadoah and she +will reward him with her love." + +"Foolish Ootah," moaned the wind, "love cannot be won with food, +neither with _ahmingmah_ meat nor walrus blubber." Ootah felt his +heart sink; a vague and heavy misgiving filled him. Being very simple, +he had always thought that by securing wealth, in dogs and food, in +guns and ammunition, and by achieving pre-eminence on the hunt, he +should win Annadoah's confidence and love. But now, upon the breath of +the winds, by the voices of nature, doubt came into his heart. The +mistake of many men the world over, and of many wiser than he, he could +not understand just why this was--this thing the winds said, and which +his own heart correspondingly whispered. With food he might possibly +win Annadoah's consent to be his wife, yes, he knew that; but +Annadoah's love--that was another thing. Surely, he now realized, as +he strode along, that by simply giving her food he could not expect to +stir in her heart a response to that which throbbed in his. But why? +Singularly he never thought of the bravery of his seeking food on this +perilous adventure, an act which, had he known it, had indeed touched +the heart of the beautiful maiden. + +With the quick atmospheric change of the arctic--a phenomenon common to +zones of extreme temperature--the wind steadily increased in velocity +and warmth. The shallow moon-shot clouds on the ice thickened and +swept softly under the two travellers' feet. Above their waists the +air was clear--they saw each other distinctly in the moonlight. Yet +their dogs, hidden in the low-lying vapor, were invisible. Great +masses of clouds slowly piled along the horizon and the moon was often +obscured. Then the two walked in a darkness so thick it seemed +palpable. + +"Hark!" Ootah called, during one of these spells. "What is that?" A +shuddering sound split the air; the ice field on which they travelled +vibrated with an ominous jar. The echoes of splitting ice came like +distant explosions. + +"Have we disturbed the spirits of the hills?" asked Koolotah, in a +whisper. + +"No, no," answered Ootah, anxiously. "_Huk_! _Huk_!" He snapped his +whip and urged the dogs. They had not gone twenty paces when from the +interior heights of Greenland came a series of muffled explosions. +Undoubtedly the hill spirits had wakened, and, angry, were hurling +their terrible weapons. + + +They reached, in due course, the top of a mountain ridge down part of +the glassy slopes of which they had to make their way to the entrance +of the cleft in which the trail they had so laboriously hewn lay. The +gorge yawned blackly some five hundred feet below. In anticipation of +their return with loaded sledges, Ootah, on the last reach of their +upland climb, had chopped on the smooth snows of the mountainside a +narrow path that ran backward and forward in the fashion of a gently +inclining elongated spiral. The mountain sloped at an angle of eighty +degrees, but by descending cautiously along this circuitous trail a +safe descent was possible. + +While Ootah and his companion stood on the peak, the moon passed behind +a veil of clouds and Ootah felt two soft wraith-like hands pass over +his face--cloud-hands which his simple mind believed were sentient +things. His heart for the moment seemed to stop. Thus the kind +spirits warn men of danger. + +At that instant a stinging sound smote the air. The glacial side of +the mountain trembled, and as the moon reappeared, on the icy slopes +Ootah saw narrow black cracks zigzagging in various directions. A +cataclysmic rumbling sounded deep in the earth. + +When the echoes died away he turned to Koolotah. + +"Be brave of heart. Let us go--there is no time to lose." + +"_Huk_! _Huk_! _Huk_!" They urged the dogs gently. Arranging +themselves instinctively in single file, the traces slackening, the +wonderful dogs, with feline caution, crept ahead. Lowering their +bodies, each behind his sledge, Ootah and Koolotah began moving +stealthily downward. With one hand each clung to the rough icy +projections of the slope; with the other they held the rear upstander +of their sleds to prevent them from sliding, with their precious loads +of meat, down the mountainside. + +Half way down, Ootah uttered a cry. + +His quick ear detected a faint splitting noise, like the crack of young +ice in forming, under his feet. In an instant he realized their danger. + +At the time he had reached a hollow in the perilous slope. The dogs +ahead, with quick instinct, retreated and crouched at his feet in the +sheltering cradle. + +Ootah saw Koolotah turn and look inquiringly upward. The next moment, +driven downward by the wind, a mass of clouds, glittering with bleached +moonfire, rolled over the slopes and hid Koolotah. Ootah only heard +his voice. + +Then the glacial mountainside to which he clung trembled. A terrific +crash, like that of cannon, followed. The very mountain seemed to +shake. For a brief awful spell everything was still--then, with an +appalling thunder, the ice split and began to move. The moon +reappeared and Ootah--in a tense moment--saw chasms widening about him +on the glistening slope. He heard the deafening echoing explosions of +splitting ice in the distance . . . With fierce ferocity he +instinctively fastened one bleeding hand to an icy projection above +him, with the other he held with grimly desperate determination to the +sled . . . In the next dizzy instant he felt the icy floor beneath him +lurch itself forward and downward . . . before his very eyes he saw +Koolotah and his team--not twenty feet below--wiped from existence by +the descending glacier to which he clung and in the hollow crevice of +which he found security . . . In a second's space he caught a clear +vision of tremendous masses of green and purple glaciers being ground +to fine powder in their swift descent on all sides of him, . . . he +saw the feathery ice fragments catch fire in the moonlight, . . . he +heard the elemental roar and grinding crash of ice mountains sundering +in a titanic convulsion . . . then he lost hearing . . . In that same +sick bewildering moment of preternatural consciousness he thought +wildly of Annadoah . . . he saw her appealing wan face amid the blur of +white moonlight . . . he knew she needed food . . . and he felt an ache +at his heart . . . he called upon the spirits of his ancestors. Then +the silvery swimming world of white dust-driven fire became suddenly +black--and the earth seemed removed from under him. + + +In the village the natives were awakened from their lethargic sleep by +the far-away crash of the avalanche. Their faces blanched as they +thought of the hunters. "The hill spirits have smitten! _Ioh_! +_Ioh_!" they moaned. In her igloo Annadoah, who had waited with +sleepless anxiety, wept alone. Of all in the village only the heart of +one, Maisanguaq, was glad. + + + + +VII + +"_The utter tragedy of her devotion to the man who had deserted her, +and the utter hopelessness of his own deep passion, blightingly, +horribly forced itself upon him . . . Ootah asked himself all the +questions men ask in such a crisis . . . and he demanded with wild +weeping their answer from the dead rejoicing in the auroral Valhalla. +But there was no answer--as perhaps there may be no answer; or, if +there is, that God fearing lest, in attaining the Great Desire, men +should cease to endeavor; to serve and to labor has kept it locked +where He and the dead live beyond the skies._" + + +The moon dipped behind the horizon. For five sleeps naught had been +heard from Ootah and his companion. Inetlia, the sister of Koolotah, +followed in turn by some of the other women, visited the igloo of +Annadoah. Upon her couch of moss Annadoah lay, and over her a cover +given by Ootah and lined with the feathers of birds. + +"'Twas thou who sent Ootah to the mountains," one complained. "May the +ravens peck thine eyes!" cried another. Annadoah shook her head sadly +and wept. + +"'Twas thou who chose Olafaksoah, the robber from the south, that thou +mightest be his wife; and 'twas thou, his wife, who beguiled the men +and robbed thy tribe. Did we not give away our skins, and didst thou +not make garments for Olafaksoah? And do we not now shudder from the +cold? 'Twas thou who put the madness into the head of Ootah, the +strongest of the tribe. Many are the maidens who are husbandless and +yet Ootah pined for thee. Why didst thou not choose Ootah? Then he +would have remained and prevented the thievery of the strangers, we +should not have been robbed, and he would not have had to go far unto +the mountains, where the spirits have struck him in their wrath? Nay, +nay, thou didst make the men of our tribe sick with thoughts of thee. +They have quarrelled among themselves. And before the white men came, +did they not reproach us, their wives and their betrothed, with thy +name and the vaunted skill of thee? Thou art as the woman with an iron +tail, she who killed men when they came to her, their skins flushed +with love. Thou destroyest men! Thou didst send Ootah and Koolotah to +the mountains! And they have perished! _Ioh-h_! _Ioh-h_!" + +Entering her igloo two or three at a time they reproachfully recited in +chiding chants to Annadoah the story of her life; how her worthy mother +and august grand-parents had died, hoping she would choose a husband +from the hunters, and how she had refused all who sought her; they +told, with reiterant detail, how she had caused quarrels among the men, +and sent many of the warriors in their competitive hunts to death; and +how, finally, when Ootah, the bravest of the hunters, wanted to wed +her, she had chosen a foreign man, who deserted her and left her a +burden on the tribe. Sometimes they shook her roughly. + +To the native women the brutality and virility of the men from the +south exert a potent appeal; and the fact that Olafaksoah had chosen +Annadoah many moons since still made their mouth taste bitter. This +jealousy rankling within them, they now with angry exultation took +occasion to mock and abuse her. The girl lay still and did not reply. +Her heart indeed seemed like a bird lying dead in wintertime. + +Then one of three women who stood by Annadoah's couch leaned forward +and whispered a terrible thing. The others looked at the girl and +fear, mingled with hatred, shone in their eyes. + +"Thou sayest this thing," said one, "how dost thou know?" + +And the other, pointing accusingly to the girl who lay before them, her +face hidden in her arms, replied: + +"The night my baby died . . . I heard her voice." + +They stood in silence, rigid, implacable, bitter. + +During the latter dark days a terrible calamity had made itself felt +among the tribe. This was the death of many of the newly born. +Outside the igloos during the past months, as the babies had come, the +number of tiny mounds had increased, and when the aurora flooded the +skies heart-broken mothers could be seen weeping over these graves of +snow. It is not uncommon in this land for babies to die at birth or +come prematurely; but the number of recent deaths and tragic accidents +to expectant mothers was unprecedented. This was undoubtedly due to +the depleted vitality of the starving mothers--but to the natives there +was some other, some unaccountable, some sinister, cause. In their +hearts they experienced, each time a new mound rose white in the +moonlight, that tremulous terror of a people who instinctively fear +extinction. The grief of a mother was for a personal loss; to the +tribe each death meant an even greater, more significant loss, a thing +of more than personal consequence. + +And when, out of the dim regions of her brain, one of the women now +conjured the terrible thing which she whispered concerning Annadoah, it +was little wonder the other two regarded the girl as a thing hateful +and accursed. + +"_She stealeth souls!_" + +Nothing more frightful could have been said. + +"Yea, the night my baby died I heard her voice," repeated Inetlia +angrily. + +And the other, among the superstitious voices in her memory, found it +not difficult to recall a similar thing: + +"Methinks I heard her sing the night my own little one came--too soon." + +And the third whispered: + +"She is as the hungry hill spirit who feasts upon the entrails of the +dead. Yea, she carrieth off the souls of the children. _Ioh_! +_Iooh_!" + +Their voices rose in a maniacal cry of terror and denunciation. + +Annadoah rose. Clasping her hands, she demanded piteously: + +"Why . . . sayest ye this of me?" + +And they shrieked: + +"Thou stealest souls! By the _angakoq_ shalt thou be accursed!" + +"No, no! No, no!" the girl pleaded, falling on her knees and weeping. + +Although they suddenly ceased their reviling, hearing outside the +barking of dogs, the women thereafter in secret often assembled +together; there were ominous whisperings; and each time a child died +visits were paid to the _angakoq_, and the unseen powers were invoked +to bring misfortune to Annadoah. + +Outside the silenced women detected the barking of dogs approaching the +village from the distance. They heard the excited calls of tribesmen +and the chatter of other women. One by one they crept from the igloo. +A strange light in her eyes, Annadoah followed. + +Over the mountains to the north a soft and wondrous light began to +palpitate tremulously . . . While the men of the tribe rushed to meet +the oncoming team of dogs in the distance, the women stood and gazed +with awe upon the increasing wonder in the skies . . . The northern +lights, seen nowhere else so splendidly in all the world, had begun the +weaving of their glorious and eerie imagery. A nebulous film of +silvery light wavered with incredible swiftness over the heavens . . . +The snow-blanketed land took instantaneous fire in the sudden +flares . . . In the torridly tropic heaven of the virtuous dead an +Unknown God, so the tribes believe, makes fire--just as in the nether +regions beneath the earth the Great Evil, who has revealed himself with +a more terrible reality than the Great Benign, creates cold and forges +ice. In that land of the happy dead, disclosed in the aurora, there is +never any night, nor is it ever cold. So the souls there are always +happy. Sometimes in their revels they troop earthward to cheer the +mortals who suffer from _Perdlugssuaq's_ frigid breath as it comes +during winter from hell . . . The women looked at one another. The +augury was good. + +"The spirits of the dead," one whispered, "are happy . . . They are +playing ball." + +Into their midst, surrounded by the glad cheering men of the tribe, +Ootah staggered. His face was cut and covered with black clotted +blood. His legs dragged with utter exhaustion. His features were +gaunt and marked by lines of frightful suffering. His eyes were bright +with the light of fever. When he saw Annadoah a faint but very glad +smile passed over his countenance; he made an effort to forget the +anguished throes of pain in his limbs and the intermittent shudderings +of cold and flushes of intense fever. He tried to speak, but then +shook his head sadly. Instead, he pointed to the dilapidated sledge. +Three of his dogs had perished--five had been saved. The sled had been +battered, but was lashed together. Upon it, however, the precious load +of meat was intact. The subtle aroma of it sent a wave of gladness +through the crowd. They danced about Ootah, asking questions. Ootah +staggered backward and sank helpless against the sledge. After a while +he found voice. + +"I am very weak," he managed to say. + +Several of the women disappeared and soon returned with a bit of walrus +blubber. This, having undergone a process of fermentation in the +earth, possessed the intoxicating qualities of alcohol. It is used by +the natives for purposes of stimulation in such cases and in their +celebrations. Ootah with difficulty ate this. + +He felt stronger, and rose. + +"Thou art ill," said Annadoah, approaching him, and gently touching his +wounded face. "Enter, Annadoah will care for thee." + +Her face was perilously near him; it was very wan and beautiful in the +auroral light--Ootah felt his heart beat wildly. But it was pity, not +love, that shone softly from Annadoah's eyes. + +"Thy igloo is cold, thy lamp unlighted," Annadoah insisted. "Come! +The others will prepare thy couch and light thy lamps. Until then my +bed is thine. It is warm within." + +With difficulty Ootah bent low and followed Annadoah through the +underground entrance of her igloo. His dogs, which the men had +unhitched, and as many as could enter the small enclosure, followed. +The stench of the oil lamp at first almost suffocated him. He sank to +Annadoah's couch from sheer weakness, and his dogs, licking his face +and hands, crept about him. + +Meanwhile Annadoah began melting snow over her lamp. The others plied +Ootah with questions. Did he go far into the mountains? Were there +many _ahmingmah_? Did Koolotah perish? Was he in the mountains when +the spirits struck? To all of this he could only move his head in +response. While he sipped the warm water gratefully, Annadoah cut away +his leather boots and bathed his injuries. His flesh was torn and one +ankle was sprained--by a miracle not a bone had been broken in the +fall. With unguents left years before by white men, Annadoah treated +his many cuts and bruises and bound them securely with clean leather. +After he lay back on the couch she bathed his face, and rubbed into the +wounds salves which her father had given to her mother and which for +years had been preciously preserved. + +Ootah lay with his eyes closed; he seemed to float in the auroral skies +without, in the very happy land of the dead. He forgot the pain in his +limbs, the furnace in his forehead. He felt only the soothing touch of +Annadoah's dear hands, and her breath at times very near, fanning his +face; he heard her voice murmuring to the onlooking natives. Not +satisfied with these ministrations, in which they really had little +faith, the others presently brought a young _angakoq_, one better loved +than the dead Sipsu. For being young he had not prophesied many deaths. + +All moved away as the magician began beating his membrane drum over +Ootah's body. Working himself into frenzy, he called upon his familiar +spirits. For, according to their belief, illness, and the suffering +resultant from wounds, are actually caused by the spirits of the +various members of the body falling out of harmony. Then the _angakoq_ +must persuade his friends in the other world to restore peace among the +spirits of the human hands, feet, head, or whatever limbs may be +affected. The soul, or great spirit, they say resides in one's shadow, +and sometimes this falls out of agreement with the minor spirits of the +body. Then one is in bad shape, indeed. + +For half an hour the chant and dance continued. Meanwhile Ootah opened +his eyes and often smiled at Annadoah. He was better, he told them, +and motioned the _angakoq_ to go. He bade Annadoah sit beside him. He +felt unquestionably better. + +"You have asked me whether I went far over the mountains? Yea, we +travelled many sleeps, yet we scarcely rested. The world was white +about us. The spirits carried us over dark places in the hills, +wherein _Perdlugssuaq_ makes his home. But he did not strike. We were +borne over abysses. The spirits of one's ancestors are often kind. We +went through the world of the fog, she who was the wife of that hill +spirit who carried the dead from their graves and ate them. Yea, she +passed beneath our feet. We came to the high mountains. We passed +upward where the eyes of strange beasts glared upon us. I was afraid. +But I called upon my father. Then the spirits of the great dead came +down upon us. They wove _kamiks_ and _ahttees_ of fire. Their eyes +burned as the great light of the stars. They did not regard us. We +came unto the _ahmingmah_ . . . But upon our return the hill spirits +who live in the caves wakened and struck with their great harpoons. +They shook the mountains. Then the good ancestors carried me through +_sila_--the world of the air--yea, my dogs, my sledge, and the +_ahmingmah_ meat. I had called upon those who went before me. I woke +at the bottom of the mountain, three of my dogs were crushed, my sledge +was broken . . . I lay there a while . . . I slept again . . . +often . . . Then I lashed the sled, ate a little of the _ahmingmah_ +meat, and came . . . hither . . . How . . . Ootah knows not . . . It +was hard at times . . . I could hardly walk . . . the ice moved about +me . . . always . . . so--" He described a circle with his hand. "But +I bethought me of Annadoah--" he smiled--"and I said I go to +Annadoah . . . That is how I came . . . I said Annadoah is +hungry--yea, as I said it when the eyes looked at me on the mountains, +when the hill spirits made my heart grow cold, when Koolotah desired to +return . . . Koolotah--he hath gone . . . Koolotah's dogs are +gone . . . But I called upon my dead father, my dead grandfather, and +the older ones--and I thought of Annadoah." He leaned toward her +yearningly, his voice trembling. Fearfully the girl drew away. "It is +she who brought the _ahmingmah_ meat," he said. "It is she who led me +to the _ahmingmah_. Yea, she brings you the _ahmingmah_ meat. For the +thought of her brings Ootah back after the spirits strike . . . It is +she, who lives in the heart of Ootah, who has done all this . . . But +you are hungry. Come!" + +He rose slowly and crept through the underground tunnel leading from +the igloo. The others followed. Without, most of the tribe were +waiting. At Ootah's command the men unlashed the sledge-load of meat, +and the division began. To Annadoah Ootah gave one-eighth of the load, +enough to last by frugal use for more than two moons, or months. Among +the others, of whom there were about twenty-five, the remainder was +proportionately divided. For himself Ootah reserved only as much as he +gave the others. + +Outside Annadoah's igloo all engaged in a joyous revel. Hungrily they +feasted upon the raw meat. Then they beat drums and danced. Their +voices rose in hilarious chants. Wild joy shook them. Ootah was +acclaimed hero of the tribe. Although they have no chiefs, he was +accorded the honor of being the bravest and strongest among them. And +to the strongest and most heroic the last word in all things belongs. + +Of all who were able to participate in the celebration, Maisanguaq +alone retired. From the seclusion of his igloo entrance he watched the +scene with rancor in his heart. + +Over the northern skies the auroral lights played, lighting the scene +of spontaneous rejoicing with magical glory. Great silver coronas--or +rings of light--constantly arose in the north, passed to the zenith and +melted as they descended to the south. Luminous curtain-like films +closed and parted alternately like the veils of a Valhalla drawn back +and forth before the warrior souls of the north. Tremendous fan-shaped +shafts of opalescent fire shot toward the zenith and like search-lights +moved to and fro across the sky. The clouds became illumined with an +interior flame and glowed like diaphanous mists of gold half concealing +the vague faces of the beauteous spirits of the dead. Their billowing +edges palpitated with a tremor as of quicksilver. Within and through +this empyreal web of light marvellous scenes were simultaneously woven. +They lasted a moment's space and vanished. The natives, dancing +unrestrainedly, saw heavenly mountain slopes covered with grass of +emerald fire and glittering with starry flowers. They saw the gigantic +shadows of celestial _ahmingmah_ passing behind the clouds . . . and +here and there were the cyclopean adumbrations of great caribou, and +creatures for which they did not have a name. A tossing sea of +rippling waves of light was presently unfolded, and over it they saw +millions of birds, with wings of fire, soaring with bewildering +rapidity from horizon to zenith . . . This faded . . . Monstrous and +gorgeous flowers of living rainbow tints burst into bloom--fields of +them momentarily covered the heaven. These the natives regarded with +only half accustomed wonder, for they knew there were strange flowers +in the land of the dead. + +As they danced, the colored imageries steadily faded in the growing +intensity of the great banded coronas that rose from the north. A +light of cold electric fire increasingly blazed over the heavens until +a frigid silver day, brighter than any day of sunshine, reached its +brief noon upon the earth. + +Rocking their bodies and singing, the natives dispersed to their +respective igloos. Sitting on his sledge by Annadoah, Ootah dimly +heard their voices echoing into silence; he experienced terrible pains +again in his limbs and the fever in his head. Everything became dizzy, +and with a sick feeling of faintness he crept into Annadoah's igloo and +fell upon her couch. + +It was in his heart to ask her once again to be his, to repeat the +protestation of his love; he felt that he had shown he deserved to win +her. But his utter weakness, and the very enthralling delight of her +soft hands on his forehead, kept him still. He lay in a semi-delirium +suffering greatly, but at heart very happy. A new peace possessed him. +Never had Annadoah caressed him before, never had he felt the tingling +thrill of her tender hands, never had her breath so perilously warmed +his face. For an hour she sat by him, perfunctorily bathing his wounds +with the white men's ointment and rubbing a yellow salve upon his face. +And while she did this, often, very often, she closed her eyes. +Sometimes her hands, as they passed over his forehead, absently +wandered to the couch, sometimes they soothed the air near the +suffering man. Then she would recall herself. Gazing upon Ootah, pity +would fill her; and then--well, then her mind would wander. She was +faint herself, tired and half-asleep. + +Once, as she touched Ootah's hand, he closed it impulsively over hers. +Her heart gave a thud. Her eyelids quivered. A smile appeared on her +face. Ootah pressed her hand more firmly--he did not realize how +fiercely in his fever. His blood ran high; in a mingled delirium of +pain and transport he drew her slowly toward him. Her one hand soothed +his brow, softly, very gently. The smile on her face deepened. She +gasped with a throe of the old memories. + +"Olafaksoah," she breathed, rapturously. + +Ootah felt a horrible pain grip his heart. He opened his eyes, stark +conscious. He saw the eyes of Annadoah were closed. On her face he +observed the fond, far-away smile; he knew her heart was in the south. +And in that frightful moment his untutored mind by instinct realized +why she had bandaged and soothed him so tenderly, realized, indeed, +that in doing so, in his stead, her mind had conjured up the vision of +Olafaksoah. His hands were strong, she had said, they hurt her. +Ootah, with ferocity, gripped her little hand tighter. + +"Olafaksoah," she murmured again, with delight--then, recalling +herself, suddenly uttered a sharp cry of dismay as she opened her eyes. + +Ootah staggered to his feet. The utter tragedy of her devotion to the +man who had deserted her, the utter hopelessness of his own deep +passion blightingly, horribly forced itself upon him. + +"Annadoah! Annadoah! Annadoah!" he wailed, his voice sobbing the +beloved name. + +The igloo was stifling; he felt that he was suffocating. Everything +reeling about him, he crept painfully from the igloo into the night. +He felt he must be alone. + +Outside the aurora was paling with intermittent cascades of resolving +lights. Over the snows glittering rosy fingers painted running rainbow +traceries. It seemed as though the spirit revellers were pouring fiery +jewels from the skies. + +Ootah stood before that revealed and radiant land of the dead--the dead +who danced and were happy--his hands clenched and upraised above him. + +"Annadoah! Annadoah!" he sobbed the name again and again, and in his +voice throbbed all the piteousness, all the bitterness of his utter +heartbreak. There was no reproach in his shuddering sobs; only sorrow, +only the desolation and eternal heart-ache of that which loves +mightily, unrequitedly, and realizes that all it desires can never, +never be. + +Ootah asked himself all the questions men ask in such a crisis; why, +when he loved so indomitably, the heart of Annadoah should stir only +with the thought of another; why the spirits that weave the fabric of +men's fate had designed it thus. Why the ultimate desire of the heart +is forever ungranted and an intrinsically unselfish love too often +finds itself defeated--these questions, in his way, he asked of his +soul, and he demanded, with wild weeping, their answer from the dead +rejoicing in the paling Valhalla. But there was no answer--as perhaps +there may be no answer; or, if there is, that God, fearing lest in +attaining the Great Desire men should cease to endeavor, to serve and +to labor, has kept it locked where He and the dead live beyond the +skies. + +Ootah fell prostrate to the ground and his body throbbed on the ice in +uncontrollable throes of grief. The aurora faded above him. Darkness +closed upon the earth. Sitting in her igloo, startled, vaguely +perplexed and half-afraid, Annadoah heard him sobbing throughout the +night. + + + + +VIII + +"_For a long black hour of horror they were driven over the thundering +seas and through a frigid whirlwind of snow sharp as flakes of +steel . . . + +"Seeing Ootah turn slightly toward Annadoah, Maisanguaq sprang at his +throat. Their arms closed about one another . . . The floe rocked +beneath them--they slipped to and fro on the ice . . . About them the +frightful darkness roared; they felt the heaving sea under them. And +while they struggled in their brief death-to-death fight, the floe was +tossed steadily onward._" + + +The long night began to lift its sable pall, and at midday, for a brief +period, a pale glow appeared above the eastern horizon. In this brief +spell of daily increasing twilight the desolate region took on a +grey-blue hue; the natives, as they appeared outside their shelters, +looked like greyish spectres. Ootah felt the grim grey desolation +color his soul. + +He had regained his strength, and his wounds had healed with the +remarkable rapidity that nature effects in people who lead a primitive +life; only the hurt in his heart remained. Annadoah had often visited +him, and while he lay on his bed of furs she had boiled _ahmingmah_ +meat and made hot water over the lamp very solicitously. Once, +half-hesitating, she looked into his eyes, and as though she had a +confession to make, said quietly: + +"Thou art very brave, Ootah." + +This pleased him--once she had said he had the heart of a woman. + +He had thrilled when she soothed him, and now he was half sorry that +the injuries no longer needed attention. He loved Annadoah more deeply +than ever, and his greatest concern was for her. He might win +her--yes, perhaps some day, but he could not forget that, whenever she +had touched him with tenderness, she thought of Olafaksoah. + +Standing before his igloo, musing upon these things, Ootah espied in +the semi-light a dark speck moving on the ice. + +"_Nannook_! (_Bear_)" he called, and the men rushed from their houses. +Without pausing to get his gun Ootah ran down to the ice-sheeted shore. +Nature, as if repenting of her bitterness, had sent milder weather, and +the bear, emerging from its winter retreat, made its way over the ice +in search of seal. Lifting his harpoon, Ootah attacked the bear. It +rose on its haunches and parried the thrusts. A half-dozen lean dogs +came dashing from the shelters and jumped about the creature. The bear +grunted viciously--the dogs howled. The bear was lean and faint from +hunger, and its fight was brief--the lances of four natives pierced the +gaunt body. The bear meat was divided after the communal custom of the +tribe, and the gnawing of their stomachs was again somewhat appeased. +Some days later three bears were killed near the village. The hearts +of the tribe arose, for spring was surely dawning. + +Early in March Arnaluk, skirmishing along the shore, saw a bear +disappearing in the distance. The animal was making its direction +seaward, and this indicated to the astute native that its quick senses +had detected the presence of seal. + +"Ootah! Ootah!" he called. "Attalaq! Attalaq!" The two tribesmen +responded. With harpoons and lances they followed the trail of the +bear. Less than a mile from shore they found it sitting near a seal +blow hole in the ice. At the sight of the men it fled. A close +inspection resulted in the discovery of a half dozen blow holes--or +open places to which the seal rise under the ice and come to the +surface to breathe. For a long while the men waited. Standing near +the holes, their weapons ready to strike, they imitated the call of +seals. Finally there was a snorting noise beneath one of the holes. +Ootah detected a slight rise of vapor. Attalaq's harpoon descended. A +joyous cry arose. Breaking open the ice about the hole a seal was +drawn to the surface. Daily visits were thereafter made to the +vicinity and the hunters, patiently watching near the holes, succeeded +in catching several seals. Other blow holes were later detected along +the ice, then they disappeared and for a period no seal rewarded the +hunters. + +The weather continued to moderate, and these excursions on the sea ice +became more and more dangerous. One day Attalaq and Ootah, while +walking along the shore, heard a familiar call in the far distance, out +toward the open sea. + +"Walrus," said Ootah, the zest of the hunt tingling in his veins. + +"But the danger is great--the ice splits," said Attalaq. + +"But we need food." Ootah thought of Annadoah. She had not been well, +she needed food--that was sufficient. Moreover, he thought of the +children; three were dying of lack of food. So he called the tribesmen +and gave the signal for preparations to depart. A selection had to be +made of the best dogs for the dangerous trip. Few dogs remained in the +village; many had been frozen by the bitter cold; others had to be +killed as food for their companions; some had occasionally been +devoured by the famished natives. And this the desperate people had +done with reluctance and great sorrow--for, as I have said, a native +loves his dog but little less than his child. + +Ootah in the lead, with five others, started on the hunt, with three +sledges, each of which was drawn by a team of five lean, hungry dogs. +After some urging Maisanguaq had sullenly consented to accompany the +party. + +Joy flushed the natives' skin, for a thin film of sunlight trembled low +over the eastern horizon. As they sped northward past great +promontories they saw several auks. Later two ptarmigan were spotted, +and still later an eider duck. They began chanting songs of the race. + +Quickly, however, the brief sunlight faded, heavy grey clouds piled +along the sky-line, the atmosphere became perceptibly warmer, and +intermittent gusts of wind blew downward from the inland mountains. + +They directed their steps over the ice to a distant black spot, +somewhat more than a mile distant, which they knew to be open water. +There, if there were any, the walrus would be found. As they were +marching, a very faint crackling noise vibrated through the ice under +their feet. They ceased singing. Four of the party paused and would +have turned back. Ootah urged them onward. They paced off half a +mile. The wind increased in volume and whined dolefully. Their steps +lagged. Suddenly they heard the harsh nasal bellow they knew so well. +The hearts of all expanded with the joy of the hunt. + +The dogs howled hungrily and, with tails swishing savagely, tore ahead. +As they approached the edge of the sea ice they passed great lakes of +open water. The twilight still continued to thicken, the wind came in +increasingly furious blasts. Nearer and nearer came the low call of +walrus bulls. + +In a lake of lapping black water, about five hundred feet from the open +sea, a small herd rose to the surface intermittently for breath. In +the deep gloom the hunters saw fountains of spray ascending as they +breathed. Hitching their dogs to harpoon stakes driven in the ice, +they separated and quietly took positions about the open water. + +"Wu-r-r!" The low walrus call rose over the ice. Ootah leaned over +the edge of the ice and imitated the animal cry. "Woor-r," Maisanguaq, +near him, replied. The water seethed, and two glistening white tusks +appeared. Ootah raised his harpoon--it hissingly cut the air. A +terrific bellow followed. The little lake seethed. A dozen fiery +eyes, of a phosphorescent green, appeared above the water. Maisanguaq +struck, so did Arnaluk. They let out their harpoon lines--the savage +beasts dove downward, then rose for breath. In their frantic struggle +their heads beat against the ice about the edge of the space of open +water. The natives fled backward--the ice broke into thousands of +fragments. Each time the animals came up the hunters delivered more +harpoons so as to pinion securely and at the same time despatch the +prey. In the gathering gloom they had to aim by instinct. For an hour +the struggle between the alert men and the enraged beasts continued. +Several times Ootah and Arnaluk fired their guns as the green eyes +appeared so as to finish the task of killing. + +Meanwhile the grey reflection of the descending sun entirely faded +along the horizon; a bluish gloom blotted out the landscape. The wind +swept over the ice with fiendish hisses. With a quick change the air +became colder and snow flakes fell. The natives became alarmed. As +they were drawing the first walrus to the ice a sound, like the +discharge of a gun beneath the sea, startled them. Seizing their +knives they dexterously fell upon the animal and lifted the meat and +blubber in long slices from the bones. A great quantity was cast to +the ravenous dogs. Two more walrus were lumberingly drawn to the ice; +the first sledge load and two hunters started shoreward; soon the +second sledge was loaded. Ootah and Maisanguaq remained to dress the +third beast. + +Like scorpions in the hands of the mighty _tornarssuit_ the wind now +steadily beat upon the ice. The two men were almost lifted from their +feet. Not far away they heard the tumultuous crash of the rising +waves. As they were lashing the blubber to Ootah's sledge, a +resounding detonation vibrated through the ice under him--the field on +which they stood slowly but unmistakably began to move! + +Maisanguaq spoke. The wind drowned his voice. Above its clamor they +heard the ice separating with the splitting sound of artillery. +Whipped by the terrific gale the snow cut their faces like bits of +steel. In the darkness, which steadily thickened, they heard the +appalling boom of bergs and the grind of floes colliding on the sea. + +Ootah leaped to the team of dogs and interrupted their feast. He knew +they had not a single moment to lose--the field had surely parted from +the land ice and it was now a dreadful question as to whether a return +was possible. As he was hitching the dogs to the loaded sledge he +suddenly gave a start. Was he dreaming? Was he hearing the +disembodied speak, as men did in dreams? He listened intently--surely +he heard a soft sweet voice calling piteously through the wind. His +heart gave a great thud. + +Through the gathering gloom he saw something . . . a blur of +blackness . . . gathering substance as it approached over the ice. It +moved uncertainly . . . and seemed to be driven toward him by the +furious wind. + +"Look--who is it?" he called to Maisanguaq. + +For answer, through the din of the elements, a voice called brokenly, +sobbingly: + +"Ootah! . . . Ootah!" + +Ootah leaped to his feet. Out of the snow-driven blackness a frail +figure staggered toward him. + +"Annadoah," Ootah murmured, seizing the trembling woman in his arms. +She seemed about to faint. + +"Why hast thou come hither?" He hugged her fiercely to his bosom. He +felt a throb of ecstatic delight; for the first time she had +surrendered to his arms; for the first time he held her close to him; +death--for the moment--lost its terrors--he felt that he would be +willing to die, in that storming darkness, with her heart beating, so +that he felt its every pulse, close, close to his. + +The wild winds almost drowned Annadoah's words. + +"The women came to me," she panted with difficulty, and Ootah had to +bend his ear to her mouth so as to hear. "They were angry. They said +'She stealeth souls! Annadoah stealeth souls!' They said, 'Annadoah +hath caused the death of many children!' Ootah! Ootah! They came, as +they do when thou art absent. They threatened me--they called upon the +spirits, as they once called to them beneath the sea. And the curse of +the long night--of darkness--hunger--death . . . they invoked . . . of +the dead . . . upon me . . . I was afraid." Ootah felt her shuddering +in his arms. "The women came unto my igloo," she repeated +wildly--"they desired that ravens peck my eyes--that I rest without a +grave--that my body lie unburied and that my spirit never rest. And +the curse of darkness--_io-o-h-h_!--they called the curse of darkness +upon me. They trampled upon me with their feet, and they tore at my +hair . . . They came unto my igloo as the storm came and called upon +the spirits of the skins to strike me; for they said I had again driven +thee to thy death, that I had sent the others to their death. Thou +knowest I lay ill when thou didst depart. But they fell on me one by +one and hurt me--I feared they would kill me. They were angry and they +called upon the dead. The storm strikes; the spirits of the winds are +angry; the ice breaks, and it is the fault of Annadoah. So they said." + +Her eyes were wild, her hair dishevelled. Ootah felt her forehead--it +burned with fever. + +"How didst thou come hither--and why?" he asked, his heart bounding in +the thought that she had followed him, that of him she sought +protection. + +"I know not--methinks I called upon the spirits. I knew thou didst +come this way--I knew thou wouldst save me from the women. And I +followed. The way was dark. The wind held me back. But I knew thou +wert here--my heart led me; my heart found thee as birds find grass in +the mountains. Ootah! Ootah! I fear I shall die!" She collapsed in +his arms. The wind shrieked! In the distance two icebergs +exploded--there was a flash of phosphorus on the sea as the arctic +dinosaurs collided. + +"Come! Or we perish in the sea!" Maisanguaq, his head bent near so as +to hear, now yelled into Ootah's ear. + +Annadoah cowered at the sound of his voice. Ootah felt her trembling, +in his arms. + +"And he . . . is here?" she whispered. "I am afraid." + +They felt the great ice field rocking on the waves imprisoned beneath +them. It trembled whenever it touched a passing berg. + +Maisanguaq prodded the terror-stricken dogs. Their howls shrilled +through the storm, + +"_Huk_! _Huk_! _Huk_!" he urged. + +Supporting Annadoah with one arm Ootah pushed forward after the moving +team. He knew they were being carried steadily and slowly seaward, but +he had hopes that the ice field would swerve landward toward the south +where an armlike glacier jutted, elbow-fashion, into the sea and caught +the current. + +Snapping their whips and frantically urging the dogs, they fought +through the snow-driven darkness and over the moving field of ice. +Annadoah murmured wild and incoherent things in her delirium. They +paced off half a mile. + +"_Aulate_!" Ootah suddenly called, panic-stricken. "Halt! halt!" +Maisanguaq stopped the dogs. Before them a snaky space of water, +blacker than the darkness about them, and capped with faintly +phosphorescent crests of tossing waves, separated them--Ootah knew not +how far--from the land. + +"To the right!" Ootah called. "Let us go onward!" + +"_Huk_! _Huk_!" Maisanguaq encouraged the dogs. + +"The floe may land near the glacier," Ootah cried. + +He spoke to Annadoah. She made an irrelevant reply about the women who +called upon the spirits--and their terrible maledictions. + +With Maisanguaq ahead driving the dogs, they turned to the south. +Annadoah sank helpless in Ootah's arms--she could no longer walk. +Ootah supported her. At times his feet slipped. He felt himself +becoming dizzy. The beloved burden in his arms became unsupportably +heavy. They travelled in utter darkness, near them the desirous clamor +of the waves. Seaward, at times, where the splitting floes crashed +against one another, there ran zigzag lines of phosphorescence. The +winds howled in the ears of Ootah like the voices of the unhappy dead. +Occasionally he heard the voice of Maisanguaq ahead urging the team. + +Ice froze on their faces, frigid water swept the floe. Their garments +became saturated and froze to the skin. Finally the dogs refused to +move. "We can go no further," said Maisanguaq, in terror. "I am +resigned to die." Ootah stubbornly invoked the spirits of his +ancestors for succor. He called to the dogs. + +Thereupon a terrific shock caused both men to reel. The ice field +trembled under them--then stopped. + +Ootah realized that a section of it had swept against one of the many +land-adhering glaciers. There was hope--and greater danger. + +With a rumbling crash that reverberated above the storm the field +separated into countless tossing fragments. The cake on which the +terror-stricken party cowered swirled dizzily in an eddy of the +released foaming waters. On all sides the inky waves seethed up among +the crevices of the sundering floes. To the south Ootah heard the +breakers booming against the ice cliffs, which perilously barred the +currents of the angry sea. The caps of the curling waves took on a +pale white and appalling luminesence. + +"The faces of the dead!" cried Maisanguaq in superstitious terror. +"From the bosom of _Nerrvik_ they come to greet us." + +Ootah, however, felt no fear. For once he felt unheedful of those in +the other world. His mind was occupied with a more immediate +interest--that of saving the life of the woman he loved. + +With quick presence of mind, Ootah grasped the rear upstander of the +sled, which had begun to slide to and fro, and planted his harpoon in +the ice. + +"Thy axe!" he shouted. Maisanguaq passed the axe. Ootah grappled for +it in the darkness. "Hold the harpoon," he directed. Mechanically +Maisanguaq groped for the harpoon and held it while Ootah, with his one +free hand, lifted the axe and drove it into the ice. With the other +hand he still gripped the unconscious woman. Her hair swished about +his legs in the howling wind. Maisanguaq planted his own weapon in the +ice on the opposite side of the sledge, and Ootah, with unerring +strokes, hardly able to see it in the darkness, pounded it firmly into +the ice. + +"Thy lashings," he called. Maisanguaq passed a coil of skin rope. + +About the improvised stakes which secured the sled Ootah whipped the +lashings, then he passed them under and over the sled until it was +securely pinioned. Very gently he placed Annadoah upon the mass of +walrus meat and lashed her body in turn to the sled and about the +stakes. With Maisanguaq's assistance he tied the cowering dogs to the +harpoons. This done, the two men, benumbed and dazed, clung to the +anchor for support. + +As the severed ice cakes dispersed, a curling wave lifted the floe on +which they clung high on its crest and tossed it southward. As it rose +on the surging breakers Ootah felt the dread presence of _Perdlugssuaq_ +ready to strike. Each time they made swift, sickening descents in the +seething troughs he felt all consciousness pass away. On all sides the +waves hissed. Torrents of water swept over the floe. Ootah felt his +limbs freezing; he felt his arms becoming numb. He feared that at any +moment he should lose his grip and be swept into the raging sea. Then +he thought of Annadoah and conjured new courage. For a while the dogs +whined--then they became silent. One already was drowned. Ootah bent +over Annadoah to protect her from the mountainous onslaughts of icy +water. His teeth chattered--he suffered agonies. For a long black +hour of horror they were driven over the thundering seas and through a +frigid whirlwind of snow, sharp as flakes of steel. + + +The recoiling impetus of the waters gradually increased under them. +Ootah knew this indicated an approach to land. The waves came in +shorter, but quicker swells. The floe bumped into others. Ootah +roused himself and hopefully turned toward Maisanguaq. + +"We approach the land," he called. "We must bide our time--then jump." + +The waves washed the floe toward the distant shore. Land ice steadily +thickened about them. Maisanguaq realized that they were actually +being carried to the sheltering harbor of the arm-like glacier south of +the village. Ootah quickly began unlashing Annadoah so as to be +prepared to seize her and spring, when the opportunity came, from cake +to cake, to safety. + +Impelled by a warning instinct, Ootah suddenly looked up from his task, +and felt rather than saw Maisanguaq near and about to leap upon him. +Maisanguaq's eyes dimly glowered in the dark. Ootah rose quickly. +Maisanguaq drew back and uttered an exclamation of chagrin. Ootah +understood. With rescue possible, Maisanguaq had quickly come to a +desperate resolution. + +The girl lay between them. + +Ootah braced himself. + +"I hate thee, Ootah," Maisanguaq shouted, no longer able to suppress +the baffled jealousy and seething envy endured quietly for many +seasons. He moved about, parleying for time and a chance to spring +upon Ootah when he was unguarded. + +"I hate thee not, Maisanguaq," Ootah replied. + +He steeled himself, for he knew Maisanguaq was strong, he knew the ice +was treacherous; he waited for the man to strike. + +"My heart warms for Annadoah; so doth thine: therefore, thou or I must +die." Maisanguaq's deep voice sounded hoarse through the storm. + +"As thou sayest," Ootah replied, "but why?" + +"Annadoah must be thine or mine; dead, she cannot choose thee, and with +thee dead, my strength shall cow her. As men did of old I shall carry +her away by force. She shall be mine." + +"Annadoah hath already chosen--her heart is in the south," Ootah +replied, sadly. + +"Fool!" the other man shrieked. "Didst thou not go to the mountains to +get her food; didst thou not thieve from thine own self to give oil to +her; didst thou not fawn upon her and perform the services of a woman? +Thou liest if thou sayest thou wilt not have her for thy wife. No man +doeth this unseeking of reward." + +"I love Annadoah," Ootah said, bitterly. + +"Yea, and thou hast hope." + +"Perchance--perchance I have hope." + +"And Annadoah looks with favor upon thee--I have seen it in her eyes. +Did she not greet thee as women greet their lovers when thou camest +from the mountains, and did she not bind thy wounds with strange +ointment?" + +"She thought of another--her heart was in the south." + +"Hath she not sought thee hither--upon the ice--when the women fell +upon her with their curses? Her heart wings to thee, did she not say, +as birds to green grasses in the mountains?" + +"Her heart is in the south," Ootah sadly moaned. + +"The heart of woman changes always," cried Maisanguaq. "The heart of +woman always yields to force. _Pst_?" + +Seeing Ootah turn slightly toward Annadoah, Maisanguaq sprang at his +throat. Their arms closed about one another. Maisanguaq breathed the +wrath of the spirits upon Ootah. He fought with the fierce strength of +one insane with jealous, murderous rage. The icy floe rocked beneath +them. They slipped to and fro on the treacherous ice. The sharp snow +beat their faces. Water washed under their feet. At times they +reached, in their frightful struggle, the very edge of the floe, and +seemed about to tumble into the seething sea. Ootah felt Maisanguaq +trying to force him into the watery abyss--but he fought backward . . . +time and time again . . . They constantly fell over the unconscious +woman on the sledge. About them the darkness roared; they felt the +heaving sea beneath them. And while they struggled, in their brief +terrible death-to-the-death fight, the floe was tossed steadily onward. +Ootah felt his breath giving out. Maisanguaq felt Ootah's hands +closing about his throat. He felt the blood pound in his temples. +Desperation filled him--he determined to kill Ootah by any means. A +grim suggestion came to him. He endeavored to release himself. + +In a lull of the wind both heard something that made them start. +Aroused from her feverish coma by the two men falling against her, +Annadoah suddenly cried aloud. The two men stood stone-still, locked +in a deadly grip. At that moment Annadoah felt the warmth of their +panting breath as they paused near her. Where she was at first she did +not realize. She heard a clamor of wind and breaking waters. She +imagined herself being tossed through the air in the arms of the +_tornarssuit_. At the same time she became vividly aware of the +desperate struggle nearby. Subconsciously she realized Maisanguaq and +Ootah were engaged in a fight to the death. In the darkness she sensed +them moving away from her. Straining her eyes she began, very +dimly--as Eskimos can even in pitch darkness--to descry the black +outlines of the two men wrestling as they shifted nearer and nearer the +edge of the ice. Then it dawned upon Annadoah's mind that they were +being carried, in the jeopardy of an awful storm, on a floe that was +tossed hither and thither in a maelstrom of angry waters. A frantic +desire to save Ootah surged up within her. Behind him she saw the +swimming blackness of the heaving waves. She attempted to rise. Her +head swam; there was loud ringing in her ears. Her hands were not +free, her ankles were bound--she struggled to release herself. +Twisting her wrists and ankles in the tight lashings until they bled, +it suddenly flashed upon her that she was lashed to the sled. She knew +that at any moment the floe might crash into a glacier and be crushed +to atoms. She knew that Maisanguaq and Ootah were fighting for the +possession of her--that both might perish, or, what was worse, that +Maisanguaq might win. Chaotic terror filled her. Struggling +frantically but ineffectually, she uttered a maniacal scream. + +"Ootah! Ootah!" + +Ootah did not reply. + +The storm howled. The wind lashed the floe--it fell like a whip on her +face. Annadoah felt the surging impetus of the angry sea under them. +She felt herself rising on the crests of mighty waves and being swiftly +hurled into foaming troughs of water. Frigid spray bathed her face. +Still the two vague shadows, darker than the night, slowly and +laboriously moved about her. At times they brushed her lashed +body--then she felt the quick gasps of their breath; she sensed the +strain of Ootah's limbs twisting in the struggle. + +Again she perceived the two shifting away and being merged into the +swimming blackness. Presently she saw only the phosphorescent crest of +a mountainous wave . . . rising in the distance . . . She became cold +with white fear--she felt her blood turn to ice . . . She screamed and +struggled vainly with the lashings . . . She felt the floe rise, felt +herself being steadily lifted into the sheer air, and of paralyzed +fright again swooned. + +Maisanguaq, by a fierce wrench, managed to release one hand, struck +Ootah a heavy blow and broke away. Leaping to the opposite side of the +sledge, with a terrific pull, he drew one of the harpoons out of the +ice and with his knife speedily cut it loose from the lashings. Ootah, +stunned for a moment, turned upon him. Maisanguaq desperately raised +the weapon. Ootah heard it hiss through the air. He reeled +backward--the harpoon grazed his arm and struck the ice. + +At that very instant the oncoming breaker descended with a rush from +behind--a torrent of water washed the floe. Ootah was lifted from his +feet and dashed against the sled. When he rose he waited in silence +for an attack. There was none. He moved over the floe cautiously, +feeling the darkness. Creeping to the edge he saw something dimly +white and blurred on the receding wave. "Maisanguaq," he called, +softly. There was a pang at his heart, for he was truly gentle. He +strained his ears to hear through the din of the elements. The floe +suddenly jolted him as it was carried, with a thud, against +shore-clinging ice. Ootah peered seaward, and called again, loudly-- + +"Maisanguaq!" + +Only the waves replied. + +Hurriedly he cut the leather lashings and, leaping from floe to floe, +carried Annadoah to the shelter of the shore. Returning he loosened +the dogs. Only three lived. Biding his time until the floe was ground +securely among others, he then dragged his load of meat ashore. +Sinking to the earth he rubbed Annadoah's hands and breathed with eager +and enraptured transport into her face. + +He called her name. Presently she stirred. + +"Ootah," she murmured. "It is very dark--very dark--I wonder . . . +whether . . . it will soon . . . be spring." + +He chafed her hands. For a lucid moment she nestled to him and in a +terrified voice whispered---- + +"Maisanguaq--where is he?" She heard Ootah's reply. + +"He hath gone the long journey of the dead." + +Annadoah breathed a sigh of relief and again floated into the coma of +fever and exhaustion. + +The journey before Ootah was desperately difficult in the storm and +darkness. In his way of reckoning he knew they had floated about two +miles south of the village. The return lay along the sea and over +crushed, blocked ice. Much as he regretted it, he was compelled to +leave the precious load of walrus blubber behind, so as to carry +Annadoah, who was unable to walk, on the sledge. He covered the +blubber with cakes of ice, hopeful that it might by chance escape the +ravaging bears. His companions might come for it after his return. He +knew the probabilities were, however, that the keen noses of bears or +wolves would detect it. + +After lashing Annadoah to the sledge, so she might not be jolted from +it, Ootah, with a brave heart, started in the teeth of the biting wind. +The half-frozen dogs rose to their task nobly and pulled at the traces. +Ootah pushed the sledge from behind. He trusted to the sure instinct +of the animals to find a safe way. Progress was necessarily slow. +Fortunately the snow stopped falling and one agony was removed. + +In lulls of the storm Ootah heard Annadoah moaning in her delirium. + +When they reached the village, a half dozen men were assembled outside +their houses. They rejoicingly hailed Ootah, whom they had counted +among the dead. He learned that two of his companions had gone to join +Maisanguaq. The first party had safely reached the shore before the +breaking away of the ice. The news of Ootah's arrival brought out the +women. When they saw Annadoah they crowded about her, scolding. Ootah +silenced the garrulous throng with a fierce command. They shrank away. + +"She came to me on the ice," he said. "Knew ye not that the spirits +fared not well within her, that she was ill, ye she-wolves? She sees +things that are not so and raves of the curses ye invoked, barking +she-dogs! _Aga_! _Aga_! Go--go!" + +Assisted by several of the men, Ootah conveyed Annadoah into her igloo +and laid her upon her couch. Her face was flushed, and as she lay +there Ootah thought she was very beautiful. She had become much +emaciated--Ootah did not like that. But when she opened her eyes Ootah +saw in them a soft, new light. + +"Thou art brave, Ootah," she said, essaying a smile of gratitude. +"Thou art brave of heart . . . and kind." + +Ootah's heart stirred. Once she had said that his heart was as soft as +that of a woman; this was, indeed, to him reward for all the frightful +terrors he had endured on the storming sea. + +"And do the wings of thy heart not stir, Annadoah?" he asked softly, a +world of pleading in his voice. "Wilt thou not be mine in the spring?" + +"In the spring," she said, dreamily, and her voice quavered . . . "in +the spring . . ." + +A far-away look came into her eyes, and Ootah felt an infinite ache at +his heart. + +"I am afraid, Ootah," she said presently, in a trembling voice . . . +"Afraid . . . my head burns--the igloo is black . . . Dost thou +remember what the women told their dead? . . . They invoked the dead +to curse me . . . as I stood by the open sea . . . when the moon +rose . . . Ootah! Ootah! I cannot see thee . . . It is very . . . +dark." Ootah laid his hand upon Annadoah's head. + +"The spirits do not fare well within thee," he said. "But I will care +for thee." + + +For nearly a moon Annadoah lay ill with a strange fever. And in her +disturbed dreams, as Ootah watched through the long hours, she murmured +vaguely, but longingly, for the spring. + + + + +IX + +"_Turning softly, she found a tiny naked baby . . . Annadoah leaned +forward, gazing at it intently, wildly--then uttered a scream as though +she had been stabbed to the heart . . ._" + + +The sun rose above the horizon and flooded the earth with liquid gold; +again the sea ran with running light; the melting glaciers shimmered +with burning amethystine hues; the snow-covered mountains took fire and +glowed with burning bars of chrysoberyl and sapphire, while on the +limpid sea the moving bergs glittered like monstrous diamonds +electrically white. On the sequestered slopes of the low mountain +valleys green mosses once more carpeted the earth, buttercups and +dandelions peeped pale golden eyes from the ground, in the teeming +crevices of the high promontories delicate green and crimson lichens +wove a marvellous lacery, and wherever the sun poured its encouraging +springtime light beauteous small star- and bell-shaped flowers burst +into an effulgence of pale rose and glistening white bloom. The +suggestion of a very faint, sweet aroma pervaded the air. + +Above the promontories millions of auks again made black clouds against +the sky,--eider ducks floated on the molten waters of sheltering +fjords,--along the icy shores puffins, with white swelling breasts, sat +in military line,--guillemots cooed their spring love songs and fulmar +gulls uttered amorous calls,--on the green slopes the white hare of the +arctic gambolled, and tiny bears, soft and silken flossed, played at +the entrances of moss-ensconced caves. Out on the sea unexpected herds +of walrus lay sleeping on floating ice; harp seals sported joyously in +the waves; a white whale spouted shafts of blue water high into the +air. From the interior mountains came the howl of wolves and foxes, +the sound of rushing waters and the roar of released glaciers. Nature +was vocal with awakening life. + +In her igloo Annadoah lay alone--for with spring the time of her trial +had come. + + +In the customary preparations for the coming of Annadoah's unborn child +Ootah had entered with rare tenderness and solicitude. When a little +one is expected among these northern people, new clothing, of the +rarest skins of animals and the feathers of birds, must be made for +both mother and child; a new igloo is built for the event by the happy +father, for the little one they believe should come in a house +unspotted and white as the driven snow. Annadoah was deserted, +husbandless; the women of the tribe remained aloof from her; Ootah +alone stood by her. And Ootah helped her with unselfish, eager +gladness. + +For several summers, in anticipation of the day when he might be a +father, Ootah had gathered exquisite and delicate skins. These he now +brought to Annadoah. There were silken young caribou hides, soft, +fluffy white and blue fox pelts, as well as the skins of hares and the +young of bears. Of these, Annadoah, in the last week of fading winter, +made, according to custom, new garments for herself. Then, as the sun +rose in early spring and the birds mated, Ootah went away to the high +cliffs, where the auks nested, and jumping from crag to crag, hundreds +of feet above the sea, gathered a thousand tiny baby auks, with crests +of wondrous down, of which the hood for the unborn child was made. In +these high crevices, from which at any moment he might be plunged to +death, Ootah gathered mosses of ineffable softness, which were placed +in the hood as a cushion for the little one. + +Near her winter home, Ootah built a new igloo for Annadoah, and never +was one made with more infinite patience and greater care. Inside it +was immaculately white, and when he lighted the new lamp the walls +glistened like silver; over the light he placed a new pot of soap +stone, for everything in that place in which a new life was to come +into being must by an unwritten law be freshly made and never used +before. He built a bed of ice, laid it thick with moss, and over this +tenderly placed, in turn, first walrus hides, then thick reindeer and +warm fox skins. He brought to the igloo a supply of walrus meat, and +then, fearful to be present at an event in which he had no right of +participation, prepared to depart to the mountains to hunt game. + +Before leaving he crept half fearfully into Annadoah's old igloo and +told her all was ready. She smiled fondly and reached forth her little +hands. "Thou art very kind, Ootah," she said, "thou art brave and +kind." Ootah was at a loss for words, but his heart beat high, and he +was very glad. + +The natives watched Annadoah, as, arrayed in her immaculate garments, +she made her way, with bowed head, to her new home; they whispered +among themselves as they saw the _ilisitok_ (wise woman) follow later. + +When she sank on the new and wonderful couch, gratitude filled +Annadoah's heart, and she murmured over and over again: "Thou art very +kind, Ootah: thou art brave and kind." Somehow the bright igloo became +black and she seemed to be floating on clouds. She remembered the +Eskimo women wailing in the moonlight . . . by the open sea . . . and +the curse they invoked upon her through the dead. She trembled and +felt inordinately cold. But she knew it was spring, for outside the +igloo, with blithesome and silvery sweetness, a bunting was singing. + + +When Annadoah awoke from her delirium of agony she saw that the wise +woman had left her. The walls of the igloo sparkled as the flames of +the lamp flickered. Over it a pot sizzled with walrus meat frying in +fat. In her half-waking condition Annadoah realized that something lay +by her, and turning, softly, she found a tiny, naked baby. Its skin +was pale golden, its hair, unlike that of other babies, was of the +color of the rays of the sun. With half-fearful gentleness she turned +it over and over. Speechless with wonder, an inexplicable stirring in +her bosom, she regarded its face--she observed its nose, the contour of +its cheeks, the arrogance of its little chin; she noted in her child +that curious and often brief resemblance of the new-born to the +father--and this immediately recalled vividly and achingly the face of +Olafaksoah. This was her child, and his. Surely, surely, with great +joy she understood! With this thought, an impetuous longing for the +father filled her. Passionately pressing the little creature to her +breast she gave vent to the homesickness and ache of her heart in wild, +convulsed sobs. The touch of the little one, the resemblance of its +tiny face to that of the blond man--these brought back the old passion +and longing in all their bitterness. Yet at the same time the child +brought a new satisfying solace to her; it filled an immeasurable void +in her heart. Now and again she held it from her, and suppressing her +violent sobs, solemnly regarded its face. She could not get over the +wonder and half-surprise that possessed her. With utter abandon she +finally fiercely clutched it to her. The infant began to cry. +Annadoah, with slow, cautious gentleness laid it down by her side, +scared, amazed. Thereupon the baby for the first time opened its eyes. +Annadoah leaned forward, gazing at it intently, wildly--then uttered a +scream as though she had been stabbed to the heart. + + +When the wise woman--who had left Annadoah alone for a long +sleep--returned to prepare food and to seek of the spirits the destined +name of the child, she saw Annadoah lying still, her face upturned, +tear drops glistening beneath her eyes. The wise woman placed some of +the fried walrus meat, or _seralatoq_--the prescribed food for a mother +the day her child is born--into a stone plate and put it on the floor +within reach of Annadoah. Then she melted some snow and placed it by +the couch. Slowly approaching the bed she lifted the naked infant. + +"When thy mother wakes," she muttered, "I shall call upon the spirits. +I shall give thee the name they gave thee in the great dark ere thou +earnest hither--the name which was born with thee and which shall be as +thy shadow." + +As she laid the little creature by the unconscious mother she saw a +strange and frightful thing. The curse! And thereupon she knew she +would not be called upon to learn of the spirits any name for this +unhappy child. It had, indeed, been named by the dead and with it the +unuttered name must soon return to the great dark. With set lips, and +the grim determination of duty on her face, she crept softly from the +igloo. + +Annadoah awoke. At first she gazed about dazedly. Then she realized +that the _ilisitok_ had been with her--she observed the meat and warm +water by her couch. She realized also that the wise woman must have +seen the horror which had gripped her heart like the teeth of wolves. +Beneath lids scarred as by the claws of a hawk, the baby's eyes had +been blasted by some unknown prenatal disease--the terrible dead, with +their talon-hands, had smitten! The child was organically blind, and, +being defective and fatherless, Annadoah knew that, by the law of her +people, it was doomed to immediate death. While she shook with terror, +withal a grim determination rose within her. All the tremendous urge +of that mighty mother-love which has beautified and ennobled the world +clamored in the heart of this simple woman that her child _must not_ +die. + +As she touched the infant with a sacred tenderness, her very hands +warmed with the impassioned affection that throbbed through her with +every heart-beat. As she gazed upon the features, faintly suggestive +of its father's, she felt that she could never part from this familiar +and intimate link with the spontaneous and powerful passion of her +girlhood. When she peered into those piteous, blighted eyes, mighty +sobs of pity shook her, but she felt that she must be silent, and she +forced back the tears. Outside, a spring bunting was still singing, +sweetly, ineffably. + +As she caressed it, the child's face twisted as if in pain. + +"Well do I know, little one, thou dost desire thy +name--_ategarumadlune_," she said. "Thou dost desire it as that which +is as precious as thy shadow. But the _ilisitok_ has gone and never +will she breathe o'er thee the name I know . . . the name I felt +stirring within me since the night . . . when the women addressed the +dead . . . Sweetly didst thou sing within my heart--but thy song came +from the darkness. Yea . . . from the darkness. _Ioh-iooh_!" + +Very gently, very softly, she pressed her fingers upon the baby's +sightless eyes. + +"I shall call thee little Blind Spring Bunting," she softly murmured, +lifting the baby and pressing its tender face to her own. "Poor Little +Blind Spring Bunting." She soothed its face, infinite pity in her +eyes. "Thou wilt never see _Sukh-eh-nukh_, nor the _ahmingmah_, nor +the birds that fly in the air, Spring Bunting. All thy days shall be +as the long night, and thy whole life shall be without any light of +moon. But thy heart is warm and bright as the sun in the south, whence +Olafaksoah came, and it makes the heart of Annadoah very warm. +Poor . . . Little . . . Blind Spring Bunting!" + +Murmuring softly she rocked the little baby gently in her arms. Then +she heard the ominous sound of a native rushing by the igloo and voices +upraised. What were they saying? That Annadoah's child was blind? + +A frantic determination to escape filled her. The danger was +immediate--she must act at once. But what should she do? Where should +she go? + +She rose and moved bewilderedly about the igloo. She felt weak and +dazed. At any moment they might break into her immaculate new home and +seize the child from her arms. At any instant they might come with +wicked ropes to wrap about the baby's tender neck. That she must flee +she knew--but where? Where? She thought of Ootah. But Ootah was in +the mountains. And not a moment could be lost. In these matters the +natives lose little time. Moreover, she knew the women hated her; and +that they had succeeded in making the men gradually bitter. + +"Olafaksoah! Olafaksoah!" she called tragically. Then she recalled +with a start that Olafaksoah had summer headquarters some twenty miles +to the south. It was a boxhouse, built on a promontory of the +Greenland coast. She remembered it, as she had seen it on a journey +south some summers before; the way thither, dangerous at this season of +the year when the ice was breaking, she well knew. Yes, she would seek +refuge there. + +"Perchance Olafaksoah hath returned--did he not say he would return in +the spring? When the buntings sing?" She laughed spontaneously. +"Yea, yea! We will go there, Little Blind Spring Bunting." + +Quickly she adjusted her own new garments, and then she took the little +golden baby and over its head and shoulders laced a tight-fitting hood +of soft young fox skin. This done she gently placed the child into the +hood on her back. Inside this was lined with the breasts of baby auks +and made downy with fibrous moss. She hurriedly secured the child to +herself by means of a sinew thread which passed about its body as it +reposed in the hood, and which in turn, passing under her arms, she +tied about the upper portion of her waist. The voices outside had +ceased. + +Suppressing her very breath, she crept through the long tunnel leading +from the igloo and peeped cautiously from the entrance. She could hear +her heart throb. She feared the natives might detect it. + +Five hundred feet to the north a group were engaged in excited +conversation. Annadoah's brain whirled with the fragments of what they +said. She knew the moment had come to depart. She emerged and on all +fours crept to the protecting lee of her igloo where she was hidden +from their view. + +An open space of six hundred feet lay between her and the cliff around +which the trail to the southern shelter lay. Annadoah summoned all her +strength of will, and then proceeded to walk slowly, with her head bent +and her face concealed, so as to avoid arousing suspicion, over the +dangerous area. Her heart trembled within her--at any moment she +expected to hear the savage cries. When she reached the cliff she felt +as if she were about to faint. + +Looking fearfully backward, with a sigh of immeasurable relief, she saw +that she was unobserved. Raising her head heavenward she breathed her +thanks to the dead father and mother who were undoubtedly watching. +She turned about the cliff, her heart bounding tumultuously, and, +panting the words of the magic spell, asked that her legs be given the +swiftness of the wind spirits. She was very faint, she had scarcely +any feeling whatever in her limbs; but summoning all her courage, +bringing to bear all the love of this child she sought to save, she +turned and ran. + +It was not long before she heard--or imagined--the angry cries of +pursuing natives behind her. + + + + +X + +"_A frail, pitiful figure Annadoah stood on the cliff, wringing her +hands toward the declining sun . . . 'I-o-h-h-h,' she moaned, and her +voice sobbed its pathos over the seas. 'I-o-h-h-h! I-o-h-h-h, +Sukh-eh-nukh! Unhappy sun--unhappy sun! I-o-h-h-h, Annadoah--unhappy, +unhappy Annadoah!'_" + + +Twenty miles to the south, on a great cliff which stepped stridently +into the polar sea, stood a house built of stray timber and boxes +which, for a half decade, had been the summer headquarters of parties +of Danish and Newfoundland traders who came north annually and scoured +Greenland for ivories and furs. The hulk of a house was +weather-beaten, dilapidated, and scarred black by the burning cold. A +more desolate habitation could not be imagined in all the world, a more +devastated land could nowhere else on all the globe be found. For +leagues and leagues to the north and south, the scrofulous promontories +lay barren under the blight of the merciless northern blasts. Over the +corroded iron rocks strata of red earth and deeper crimson ore ran like +the streaky stains of monstrous and unhuman murders committed in aeons +past. Not a particle of vegetation was visible; there were no lichens +nor starry flowers. There was no life save that of the black birds +which winged restlessly about the sky and squawked in grotesque mockery +at the region and its doom. In strange contrast, the sky was as blue +as the limpid skies of Umbria,--and nearly two hundred feet below the +gnarled gashed cliff the ocean broke in terrific cascades of diamonded +foam. + +The top of the cliff on which the house stood overleaped the sea, so +that, looking below, one saw only the recoiling waters of a rich, deep +gold, capped with silver crescents of broken spray. From the sheer +precipitous receding face of the cliff, knife-like granite spars +projected, and in the crevices and nooks of these countless birds +nested. Hungry, desirous, insatiate--the voice of that fearful and +balefully luring world--there sounded eternally the roar and crash of +the breaking golden waves. + + +Over the uneven scraggy promontory, blinded by the fierce sunlight, +Annadoah staggered. The world reeled about her; the sky above her had +become black. Before her--a small speck in the distance--she saw the +black wooden house silhouetted against the molten sea. She could +scarcely move her legs; she ached in every limb; every moment she felt +as if she would swoon, but the frenzied fear in her heart urged her on. +She suffered intolerably. + + +Of that long, tortuous journey Annadoah had no clear remembrance--with +each step her one urging, predominant thought had been to forge ahead, +to keep from swooning,--to escape those who were angrily calling far +behind. + +Leaving her village, along the difficult broken coast her trail lay; it +crept painfully up over the slippery sides of melting glaciers, some of +them a thousand feet high, and made sheer descents over places where +the ice was splitting; it writhed about hundreds of irregular sounds +and twisted fjords. + +In her desperation to escape, Annadoah, without a thought of the +danger, essayed to cross fjords where the ice was breaking. As she +sped over deceptive unbroken areas the ice often split under her feet. +In one of the sounds jammed ice was moving. To go around it she knew +would mean a loss of three miles. She leaped upon the heaving ice. It +rocked dangerously beneath her feet. As she left the shore the current +increased, the ice moved more swiftly. From cake to cake she leaped +with the agility of an arctic deer. The ice floes swirled under her +and tilted as her feet alighted. Half way across, her foot +slipped--the ice fragment eluded her wild grasp and she sank into the +frigid water. She felt herself sinking; for a moment she seemed unable +to continue the struggle--then she recalled the dear burden upon her +back. She fought the swift current and grappled madly with the jamming +ice. It gathered about her--she feared she would be buried by the +force of the impact. But with a mighty struggle she finally grasped +hold of a fortunate ridge on a cake and clambered to its surface. The +baby was unscathed. It was crying loudly in its hood. Although her +hands were almost frozen, the cold water had not entered her garments. +She leaped into the air and fled. She next scaled the rocky face of a +precipice to gain time--the rocks cut her face and hands. Swarms of +birds, frightened from their nests, surrounded her. Their cries filled +her with terror. Reaching, on the farther side, shallow streams over +which thin ice lay, she bravely forged ahead--the ice broke--her feet +sank into the mud. Her breath gave out--she felt paralyzing pangs in +her lungs. Yet the cries behind--which had become somewhat more +distant--urged her on. Again and again, in crossing water moving with +broken ice her feet slipped into black, treacherous streams, and, +swimming with native skill, she saved the child from the least harm. +By degrees its cries ceased and it fell into slumber. Occasionally +Annadoah was compelled to rest, to regain her breath. Her reserve +strength--as is that of her people--was tremendous. Staggering slowly +ahead, she often sank into engulfing morasses where the earth had +melted and willows were sprouting. Panting, trembling in every limb, +she fought her way out. For the better part of the journey her legs +moved mechanically--she was only half conscious. Urged by her +superhuman determination, the little woman struggled over twenty miles, +and when she reached the great promontory where the house stood, her +_kamiks_ were torn, her clothing was soaked with frigid water, and her +hands were bleeding from wounds inflicted by the sharp rocks.[1] + +Behind her, in her delirious flight, Annadoah ever heard the +threatening cries of pursuing tribesmen. + +As she approached the wooden house she staggered to and fro, and at one +time was perilously near the edge of the cliff. + +Upon her back the infant slept peacefully. + +"Olafaksoah! Olafaksoah!" she struggled to call, but her voice fell to +a whisper. + +The windows of the grim house were as black as burnt holes; they glared +at her unseeingly, without welcome--like blind eyes. + +Desperately she raised her voice. Only a panting, breathless plaint +quavered over the dumb, unreplying rocks. The sea licked its yellow, +hungry tongues below. + +At the door of the frame house Annadoah paused and still without losing +hope again essayed to call. Her voice broke. The house was +undoubtedly vacant. There was no reply. + +She bent her head to listen. She could hardly hear because of the +pound of blood in her ears. + +Surely he had come--did he not say he would come in the spring? + +She tried the door. It was locked. + +She beat it frenziedly with her fists. She beat it until her fingers +bled. + +Then she threw her body against it like a mad thing. With crooked +fingers she clawed savagely at the wood. At last she quelled the +tumult in her bosom and found voice. + +"Olafaksoah--Olafaksoah--Olafaksoah--_ioh-h-h_! _Ioh-h-h_!" she +screamed. She sank to her knees and pounded at the door-sill with her +fists. + + +When the native tribesmen, furious at her flight, at her temerity in +trying to evade their inviolable law, clambered up the cliff, they saw +a dark, stark figure lying still before the door of the box-house. +Their voices rose in a raucous clamor. + +Like wolves descending eagerly upon their prey they bore down upon the +unconscious woman. Some of the women of the tribe had accompanied +them. Their voices rose with eager, glad calls to vengeance; they +demanded the life of Annadoah's child without delay. The shrill howl +of their dogs was mingled in that vindictive, savage chorus. + +"Little Blind Spring Bunting," Annadoah murmured, awakened from her +trance by the approaching calls. + +Opening her eyes she saw the troop descending. Staggering to her feet +she stood with her back against the door, facing the clamoring crowd +defiantly. In their veins the savage blood of fierce centuries was +aroused, in Annadoah's heart all the primitive ferocity of maternal +protection. + +They surrounded her. The struggle was brief. In a moment--while +strong hands held her--they cut the sinew lashing and rudely tore the +baby from its hood. Annadoah fell back, half-stunned, against the +floor; in their midst the merciless howling natives had the helpless +infant. + +As they bore it over the promontory Annadoah uttered a savage, snarling +cry, as of a mountain wolf robbed of its youngling, and furiously +rushed after them. + +Grasping hold of two of the men, she piteously begged them to give her +the child. She made frantic promises. She pleaded, she sobbed, she +raved incoherently. Holding to the men with a fierce grip she was +dragged along on her knees. Then letting go, she cursed the tribe; she +called upon them the malediction of all the spirits. Her voice +broke--she could only scream. She tore her hair and fell prostrate, +her body throbbing on the rocks. + +Above the clamor Annadoah suddenly heard a strangely familiar voice +shouting from the distance. Raising herself slightly, she saw a +well-known figure bounding over the promontory toward the murderous +natives. Her heart bounded--she recognized Ootah. + +Having returned from the mountains Ootah had learned of Annadoah's +flight and the pursuit; and with an unselfish determination to save the +child he had immediately followed. + +At the very edge of the cliff the natives paused. In his hands, +Attalaq, the leader of the pursuit, held the crying babe. Their voices +were raised to an uproar; the women were chattering fiercely. With +quick dexterity Attalaq loosely twisted a leather thong about the +baby's neck, and in haste to finish the tragic task began swaying it in +his hands so as to give the helpless creature momentum in its plunge to +death. Ootah bounded toward them. + +"_Aulate_! _Aulate_! Halt!" Ootah cried. "I will be father to +Annadoah's child." + +The crowd turned--for a moment they gazed with mingled feelings of awed +surprise, half-incredulous wonder and speechless admiration upon this +man who offered to make the greatest sacrifice possible to one of the +tribe; to become the father, protector and supporter of another man's +helpless, defective infant. For, according to their custom, they just +as spontaneously grant life to a defective child when a member offers +to assume sole responsibility for its keeping as they are implacably +determined upon its death if its mother is husbandless. But seldom +does any man make this sacrifice; in this land of rigorous hardship and +starvation it means much. + +Ootah fought his way among them. They gave way, and a low groan +arose--his noble offer had come too late! + +On the crest of a golden wave a tiny white speck of a baby face gazed +in open-eyed, frightened astonishment skyward, and in a lull of the +intermittent rush of waters a thin, piercing baby cry arose from the +golden sea. + +Awe-stricken, abashed, suddenly overwhelmed with regret and shame, the +natives silently drew back . . . Ootah paused at the very edge of the +cliff . . . he saw Annadoah's pleading white face . . . he extended his +arms as a bird opens its wings for flight and brought the finger tips +of his hands together above his head. For a moment his body slightly +swayed, then poising to secure unerring aim, he leaped into the dashing +sea . . . + + +Still and statuesque as a figure of stone, but wild-eyed, Annadoah +stood alone on the extreme edge of the precipitous cliff and watched +the struggle in the dizzy depths below . . . + +Awed by the splendor of a heroism so dauntless, a love so overwhelming, +unselfish and great, the natives retreated to a far distance and waited +in fearful silence. + + +The prolonged infinity of suspense and horror of many long arctic +nights seemed concentrated in the brief spell that Annadoah tensely, +breathlessly, watched the struggle of the man to save her child. + +Annadoah saw Ootah disappear in the waters after his desperate dive +from the cliff and rise with unerring precision on the surface near the +sinking babe. The sea came thundering against the jagged rocks in +long, terrific swells, and was hurled back in a torrential tumult of +breaking foam. Ootah fought the seething waves in his effort to +grapple the living thing which was to Annadoah as the heart of her +bosom. The tiny speck had begun to sink--Ootah made a dive under the +water--and rose with the infant clasped in his left arm. With only one +hand free, he made a desperate struggle against the onslaught of the +terrible watery catapults as they hurled him, nearer and nearer, toward +the rocks beneath the cliff. Annadoah saw his white hand, glistening +with water, shine in the sunlight as he tried to climb against the +impetus of the sea. Sometimes his head sank--then only the struggling +hand was seen. She crept dangerously closer to the edge of the +cliff . . . Slowly, but steadily, Ootah and the child were being swept +backward . . . By degrees the steady strokes of Ootah's arm began to +waver. Annadoah saw him being carried further and further under the +cliff by the irresistible momentum of the waves . . . To be dashed +against the jagged rocks beneath she knew meant death. Her heart +seemed to stop . . . but presently, swirling helplessly in the foaming +cauldron of a receding breaker, she saw Ootah, still clasping the baby, +emerge from under the rocks. He still lived. He still fought. +Annadoah watched each desperate, failing stroke. She saw his strength +giving out in that unequal struggle, saw his arm frenziedly but +ineffectually beating the water, saw his head disappear . . . for +longer and still longer periods . . . She caught a last vision of his +white upturned face, of his eyes, filled with importunate devotion, +gazing directly at her from out the blinding waters . . . + +Then she fell to her knees, and lowering her body, gazed wildly, for a +long, long time, into the sea . . . + +Suddenly she uttered a low, sharp, involuntary cry--and the waiting +tribesmen, recoiling as though stunned, understood. They all loved +Ootah--none dared, none could speak. Silent, grief-stricken, they +turned away their faces--even their dogs were still. Annadoah still +peered, searchingly, for a long time, into the sea. + +No, there was nothing there--nothing. On the aureate waves was no +speck of life. + +Rising, Annadoah gazed with wide-open, solemn eyes seaward; for the +moment she felt in her heart only a dull ache. + +Along the horizon to the east the sun, irradiant and magnified, lay low +over the heaving seas. Over its face, like a veil of gold, translucent +vapors--the breath of _Kokoyah_, the god of waters--rose from the +melting floes. A strange spell seemed suddenly to have fallen over the +earth. Out on the ocean the great bergs, which had majestically moved +southward like the phantoms of perished ships, seemed to pause. The +little birds which had clustered about the rocks disappeared. High in +the sky above her, a sinister black bird poised motionless in the air. + +At her feet the roaring clamor of the waves seemed resolved into the +solemn sobbing measure of some chant for the dead. + +Slowly and by degrees the utter realization of her loss dawned upon the +soul of Annadoah. And to her in that magical spell the spirits of +nature and the souls of the dead began to manifest themselves. + +Out of the crimson-shot vapors mystical forms took shape. Annadoah saw +the beautiful face of _Nerrvik_, and in the mists saw her watery green +and wondrous tresses of uncombed hair. She saw the nebulous shadow of +the dreaded _Kokoyah_, the pitiless god of the waters, to whose cold, +compassionless bosom had been gathered Ootah and Little Blind Spring +Bunting. + +Along the horizon Annadoah saw the clouds moving to the south. Higher +up they moved to the west, and toward the zenith stray flecks moved to +the north. The spirits of the air were not at peace among themselves. +And dire things were brooding. From the inland highlands of Greenland +now came a series of swift explosions, and in the brief succeeding +interval there was an unearthly silence. Then a grinding crash rent +the air. The spirits of the mountains had engaged in combat. And in +the swift downward surge of the glacial avalanches Annadoah saw tribes +wiped from existence and villages swept into the sun-litten sea. But +Annadoah knew that the sun-litten sea was a treacherous sea; she knew +that _Koyokah_, whose face in the mist was wan, whose lips were golden, +had no love for men, and she knew that the spirits of the air, who +moved in the diversely soaring clouds, were engaged in some fell +conspiracy against her helpless race. + +A vague realization of the impotence of humanity against fate, against +the forces that weave the loom of life within and without one's heart, +weighed crushingly upon her. + +Radiant indeed was the sky and softly molten golden the glorious sea, +but yet, grim and grisly, behind this smiling face of nature, Annadoah, +primitive child of the human race, shudderingly felt the malevolent and +evil eyes of _Perdlugssuaq_, the spirit of great evil, he who brings +sickness and death. Annadoah felt that instinctive fear which humanity +has felt from the beginning--the superstitious terror of tribes who +confront extinction, in the face of famine; the quiet white tremor of +the hard working hordes of modern cities in the face of poverty and +starvation; the dread of savage and civilized races alike of the +incomprehensible factor in the universe which wreaks destruction, that +original and ultimate evil which all the world's religions recognize, +interpret, and offer to placate--the force that is hostile to man and +the happiness of man. + +On the smooth tossing waters, reflecting the glory of the sky, there +was no sign of those who had perished. + +Then, after the first crushing sense of helplessness, an instinctive, +insurgent hope that would not be defeated asserted itself. Annadoah +called upon _Nerrvik_, for surely _Nerrvik_ was kind to men. She +pleaded with _Kokoyah_. She importuned the spirits of the sea and air +to return her beloved ones to her. + +"_Nerrvik_! _Nerrvik_!" Annadoah supplicated persuasively, "gentle +spirit of the sea, lift Ootah unto me! Thou who art kind to man and +givest him fishes from the deep for food, give unto Annadoah's arms +Little Blind Spring Bunting." + +She swayed her frail body to and fro, and in a tremulous, plaintive +chant told unto the gentle and gracious spirit of the waters all that +Ootah had been, all that he had done for the tribe; of his prowess, of +his love for her, of her own hardness, and how she had turned a deaf +ear to his pleading. Incident after incident she recalled. She told +of the long night, when Ootah went by moonlight into the mountains, how +he had braved the hill spirits, how they struck him in the frigid +highlands, and how the beneficent _quilanialequisut_ had brought him +home. Her exquisite voice rose to a splendid crescendo as she +described that valorous adventure, and in the chant ran the _motifs_ of +the hill spirit's anger, the brave leaping steps of Ootah, the tremor +of the mountains as they were struck, and the deep tenderness of +Ootah's love. In that customary chanting address to the spirits, +Annadoah told of Ootah's return from the mountains, of the suffering he +endured, and how, when she soothed him, she thought of the great trader +from the south. She recalled how he had staggered from the igloo, the +agony in his eyes, and how she heard him sobbing his heart-break in the +auroral silence without her igloo through the long sleep. + +Extending her arms over the sea, Annadoah reiterated, after each +statement of Ootah's bravery, her plea to _Nerrvik_ that Ootah be given +back to her. + +"_Nerrvik_! _Nerrvik_!" she called, "surely thou art kind! O thou +whom, when the great petrel raised a storm, wast cast into the depths +by those thou didst love, thou whose heart achest for affection--hear +me, hear me, and Annadoah will surely come to thee very soon and comb +thy hair in the depths of the cold, cold sea." [2] + +Tears fell from her eyes. With self-reproach she told of her old +longing for Olafaksoah, the blond man from the south, whose grim, +fierce face had cowed her, yet whose brutality had thrilled her, to +whose beast-strength and to whose beast-passion all that was feminine +in her had surrendered itself. But he had left her--he said that he +would come back in the spring. Now, she knew he would not come +back--and she did not care. As if to convince the spirit of this, she +compared Olafaksoah with Ootah; she knew now that he had used her to +rob her people, that his heart was as stone. Ootah, she had once said, +had the heart of a woman; but now she realized the difference between +them. She knew the arms of Ootah were strong, that the words of Ootah +were true, that the heart of Ootah was kind. And she felt stirring in +her bosom things she could not express; a vague comprehension of the +pure spirituality of the man who had died to save her child, a response +to the love that had stirred in the bosom now cold beneath the sea. +All the primitive deep profundity of the devotion of that wild-hearted +man who had brought a wealth of food to her from over the mountains, +who had faced death for her on the frozen seas, who had tended her in +her time of trial with the gentleness of a woman, his indomitable +heroism, the splendor, the dauntless unselfishness and bravery of his +offering to father her sightless child--all this--all this, and +more--welled up in the heart of Annadoah. + +"_Nerrvik_! _Nerrvik_! To him who loved her Annadoah lied. Dead, she +told him, was her heart as a frozen bird in wintertime--but her heart +was only sleeping! And now the wings are beating--beating within her +breast! _Ootah_! _Ootah_! _Ioh-h, ioh-h_!" + +Her voice broke. She beat her little breasts. She bent over the sea +and listened. For a long while she watched. + +Then, from the shadows in the clouds, the answer came. Truly Ootah was +brave, and his heart was marvellously kind; unsurpassed was his skill +on the hunt and of every animal did he kill; and great was his love for +Annadoah. Even the spirits had marvelled and spoken of it among +themselves; but Annadoah had chosen her fate; she had denied the love +that had unfalteringly pursued her, and now that she desired it, even +so to her was that love to be denied. That was fate. + +Then in a clamorous outbreak did Annadoah plead with Kokoyah. She +grovelled on the ground. She called upon all the spirits of the winds +and air. In a tremulous, heart-broken plaint she finally called upon +the spirits of her father, her mother, and those who had gone before +them. + +But unrelenting, passionless, the answer came--from the shadows in the +clouds, from the winds, from the moaning sea. To warm the wild heart +under the water was beyond the power of all the spirits. They repeated +to her, as in mockery, all that she had told them that Ootah had done, +of his mighty love for her; but nevermore might she soothe his injured +limbs, nevermore might she touch his gentle hands, nevermore might she +look into his tender and adoring eyes. His hands were cold, his eyes +were closed, his heart was still. It throbbed with the thought of her +no more--and that would be forever. That was fate. + + +A frail, pitiful figure, Annadoah stood on the cliff, wringing her +hands toward the declining sun. In the midst of that wild +golden-burning desolation, Annadoah felt her utter loneliness, her +tragic helplessness. In all the universe she felt herself utterly +alone. + +Far away, awed by the heroism, the very splendor of the bravery of the +man who had perished, the tribe stood murmuring. In their hearts was +no little unkindness toward Annadoah. But, forsaken, outcast, she did +not care. + +Over the aureate shimmering seas she wrung her little hands and into +the waves lapping at her feet her tears fell like rain. For the heart +of Annadoah ached. Nothing in the world any more mattered. All that +she had loved had perished in the sea. And she loved too late. + +Gazing at the low-lying sun, veiled as in a vapor of tears, remote, and +sadly golden in its self-destined isolation, an instinctive +wild-world-understanding of that tragedy of all life, of all the +universe perchance--of that unselfish love that is too often denied and +the unhappy love that accents only too late--vaguely filled her +primitive heart. + +Sinking to her knees, convulsed sobs shaking her, she wrung her hands +toward the sun, the eternal maiden _Sukh-eh-nukh_, the beautiful, the +all-desired. + +"_I-o-h-h-h_!" she moaned, and her voice sobbed its pathos over the +seas. "_I-o-h-h-h! I-o-h-h-h! I-o-h-h-h, Sukh-eh-nukh! I-o-o-h-h, +Sukh-eh-nukh_! Unhappy sun--unhappy sun! _I-o-o-h-h-h-h_, Annadoah! +_I-o-o-o-h-h-h-h_, Annadoah! Unhappy, unhappy Annadoah!" + +Annadoah's head sank lower and lower. Her weeping voice melted in the +melancholy sobbing of the aureate sea. One by one the natives +departed. She was left alone. To the north the sky darkened with one +of those sudden arctic storms which come, as in a moment's space, and +blast the tender flowers of spring. A cold wind moaned a pitiless +lament from the interior mountains. Yellow vapors gathered about the +dimming sun. Ominous shadows took form on the shimmering sea. + +"_I-o-h-h-h--iooh_! Unhappy sun--unhappy, unhappy Annadoah!" + +Taking fire in the subdued sunlight--and descending from heaven like a +gentle benediction of feathery flakes of gold--over and about the dark, +crouched figure, softly . . . very softly . . . the snow began to fall. + + + +[1] Annadoah's flight, extraordinary as it is, is not without even more +remarkable precedents. In one case a woman who had been rejected by +her husband made a forty-mile journey during winter to a spot south of +her village where a child, some years before, had been buried. There +the woman wept and thus consoled herself. Having exhausted her grief, +she returned to her people. On the trip she had no food whatever. + +[2] _Nerrvik_, a beautiful maiden, according to the legend, married a +storm-petrel who had disguised himself as a man. When she discovered +the deception she was filled with horror, so that later, when her +relatives visited her, she determined to escape with them. When the +petrel returned from a hunting trip and discovered that his wife had +gone, he followed, and flapping his great wings raised a terrible storm +at sea. Water filled the boat in which _Nerrvik_ was escaping. When +they realized that _Nerrvik_ was the cause of the storm her brothers +cast her into the sea. With one hand she clung to the boat; her +grandfather lifted his knife and struck. _Nerrvik_ descended into the +ocean and became the queen of the fishes. Possessing only one hand she +cannot plait her hair. A magician who can go to _Nerrvik_ in a trance +and arrange her tresses wins her gratitude and can secure from her for +the hunters quantities of fish. It is interesting to note the +similarity of the legend of _Nerrvik_ to that of Jonah. But just as +the Eskimos have changed the masculine sun of southern mythologies to +the feminine, so the victim of the mythological sea storm in the arctic +becomes a woman. + + + +FINALE + +_According to the legends of the tribes, not for many long and aching +ages shall the melancholy moon win the radiant but desolate +Sukh-eh-nukh. For having refused love she is compelled to flee in her +elected lot from the love she now desires but which she once denied, +and this by a fate more relentless than the power of Perdlugssuaq, a +fate which they do not comprehend, but which is, perchance, the Will of +Him Whose Voice sometimes comes as a strange whistling singing in the +boreal lights, and Who, to the creatures of His making, teaches the +lessons of life through the sorrows which result from the acts of their +own choosing . . . Sometime--when, they do not know--the sun and moon +will meet. They will then, having endured loneliness and long +yearning, be immeasurably happy, and in the consummation of their +desire all mankind will share . . . For as ultimate darkness closes, +all who have been true to the highest ideals of the chase will be +lifted into celestial hunting grounds, where no one is ever hungry nor +where is it ever cold; all who have done noble deeds will be hailed as +celestial heroes. He who died to save another will attain immortal +life; he who gave of his substance to feed the starving will find +ineffable food and in abundance; he who loved greatly, who suffered +rejection uncomplainingly, and who sought untiringly--even as the moon +pursued Sukh-eh-nukh for ages--will, in that land where the heart never +aches and where there are no tears, see the very fair face of his +beloved smiling a divine welcome, and her eyes filled with a radiant +response, gazing into his own. The end of the world will come, and +with it will cease the suffering struggles of all the world's races. +And then all the highest hopes of men will find their realisation in an +undreamed-of heaven to which all who have lived without cowardice, +ingratitude or taint of selfishness in their hearts, will be translated +as the world's last aurora closes its mystic veils in the northern +skies._ + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ETERNAL MAIDEN*** + + +******* This file should be named 16093-8.txt or 16093-8.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/6/0/9/16093 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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