Sedna and the Fulmar
From Franz Boaz, The Central Eskimo, 1888
Once upon a time there lived on a solitary
shore an Inung [Inuk] with his daughter Sedna. His wife had been dead for some
time and the two led a quiet life. Sedna grew up to be a handsome girl and the
youths came from all around to sue for her hand, but none of them could touch
her proud heart. Finally, at the breaking up of the ice in the spring a fulmar
flew from over the ice and wooed Sedna with enticing song. "Come to
me," it said; "come into the land of the birds where there is never
hunger, where my tent is made of the most beautiful skins. You shall rest on
soft bearskins. My fellows, the fulmars, shall bring you all your heart and
desire; their feathers shall clothe you; your lamp will always be filled with
oil, your pot with meat." Sedna could not long resist such wooing and they
went together over the vast sea. When at last they reached the country of the
fulmar, after a long and hard journey, Sedna discovered that her spouse had
shamefully deceived her. Her new home was not built of beautiful pelts, but was
covered with wretched fishskins, full of holes, that gave free entrance to the
wind and snow. Instead of soft reindeer skins, her bed was made of hard walrus
hides and she had to live on miserable fish, which the birds brought her. Too
soon she discovered that she had thrown away her opportunities when in her
foolish pride she had rejected the Inuit youth. In her woe she sang: "Aja.
O father, if you knew how wretched I am you would come to me and we would hurry
away in your boat over the waters. The birds look unkindly upon me the stranger;
cold winds roar about my bed; they give me but miserable food. O come and take
me back home. Aja."
When a year had passed and the sea was
again stirred by warmer winds, the father left his country to visit Sedna. His
daughter greeted him joyfully and besought him to take her back home. The father
hearing of the outrages wrought upon his daughter determined upon revenge. He
killed the fulmar, took Sedna into his boat, and they quickly left the country
which had brought so much sorrow to Sedna. When the other fulmars came home and
found their companion dead and his wife gone, they all flew away in search of
the fugitives. They were very sad over the death of their poor murdered comrade
and continue to mourn and cry to this day.
Having flown a short distance they
discerned the boat and stirred up a heavy storm. The sea rose in immense waves
that threatened the pair with destruction. In this mortal peril the father
determined to offer Sedna to the birds and flung her overboard. She clung to the
edge of the boat with a death grip. The cruel father then took a knife a cut off
the first joints of her fingers. Falling into the sea they were transformed into
the whales, the nails turning into whalebone. Sedna holding onto the boat more
tightly, the second finger joints fell under the sharp knife and swam away as
seals; when the father cut off the stumps of the fingers they became ground
seals. Meantime the storm subsided, for the fulmars thought Sedna was drowned.
The father then allowed her to come into the boat again. But from that time she
cherished a deadly hatred against him and swore bitter revenge. After they got
ashore, she called her dogs and let them gnaw off the feet and hands of her
father while he was asleep. Upon this he cursed himself, his daughter, and the
dogs which had maimed him; whereupon the earth opened up and swallowed the hut,
the father, the daughter, and the dogs. They have since lived in the land of
Adlivun, of which Sedna is the mistress.