FROM THE MYTHOLOGY OF THE CHIPPEWAS.
In a peculiar class of languages like
the native American, in which symbols are so extensively
used, it might be anticipated that Death should be
thus denoted.
I asked SHAGUSH KODA WAIKWA, from
whom this allegory is derived, whether the Northern
Indians discriminated between a corpse, a ghost, a
spirit, an angel, and death, considered as a personification.
The answer was affirmative, and I received the name
for each.
Pauguk, according to this authority,
is the personification of death. He is represented
as existing without flesh or blood. He is a hunter,
and besides his bow and arrows, is armed with a puggamagon,
or war club. But he hunts only men, women, and
children. He is an object of dread and horror.
To see him is a sure indication of death. Some
accounts represent his bones as covered by a thin
transparent skin, and his eye sockets as filled with
balls of fire.
Pauguk never speaks. Unlike the
JEEBI or ghost, his limbs never assume the rotundity
of life, neither is he to be confounded in form with
the numerous class of minor Manitoes, or spirits.
He does not possess the power of metamorphosis.
Unvaried in repulsiveness, he is ever an object of
fear; and often, according to Indian story, has the
warrior, flushed with the ardour of battle, rushing
forward to seize the prize of victory, clasped the
cold and bony hand of PAUGUK.
“I shall never forget the fate
of OWYNOKWA,” continued the narrator. “She
was a widow of my native village, who had been left
with six sons. One after the other, as they became
of suitable age, they had joined the war parties who
went out against their enemies and fallen in battle.
At last but one was left; he was her only stay and
comfort, supplying her with food and protection in
her old age. But he too, as he became old enough,
spurning the dull life of a hunter, followed the war
drum of his tribe, and went out against our enemies
in the West. The absence of such a war party,
is a time of anxiety and suspense with the women of
a village. To relieve this, and at the same moment
to prepare them for more particular intelligence,
the returning party gives the war-cry of triumph,
and the death-wail indicating the number slain, as
soon as they come within hearing. On the present
occasion, Owynokwa rushed from her lodge, the moment
she caught the first sound. She stood with her
lips parted, in an attitude of intense and agonized
suspense; and as soon as the death-wail broke upon
her ear, despair appeared to rivet her to the spot.
She heeded nothing; not a muscle moved; she neither
inquired nor heard, who were the slain, but sank slowly
to the earth in the place where she stood. She
was carried into her lodge, and the next morning showed
signs of réanimation, but they were slight and
brief the rigidity of death soon seized
upon her frame, and she followed her son to the land
of spirits. Her son was indeed among the slain,
but mortal tongue had not communicated the fact.
It was generally supposed she had met the glare of
Pauguk at the moment the death-wail or Chee kwau dum
had broke on her ear.”