The visiting animals

An old man grieving his son’s death built a winter-house near the grave. One evening, three mysterious visitors—a tall man, a flat-nosed man, and a small, pale figure—arrived. They requested unusual items before departing. The old man was astonished to see them transform into a reindeer, a fox, and a hare as they left, with the hare reportedly seeking something for a new tooth.

Source: 
Tales and Traditions of the Eskimo 
by Henry Rink 
[William Blackwood and Sons] 
Edinburgh and London, 1875


► Themes of the story

Supernatural Beings: The visitors reveal their true forms as a reindeer, a fox, and a hare, indicating interactions with supernatural entities.

Transformation: The mysterious visitors undergo physical changes, shifting from human-like appearances to animal forms.

Ancestral Spirits: The old man’s grief and the subsequent visitations suggest a connection between the living and the spiritual realm, possibly representing ancestral spirits offering guidance or comfort.

► From the same Region or People

Learn more about the Inuit peoples


Abridged version of the story.

An old man, while staying in a firth to fish for salmon, lost his son, who died at some distance up the country. In his grief he could not persuade himself to leave his son’s grave, and he therefore put up his winter-house on the spot. In this lonely abode they were once surprised by seeing three men entering the house, one of them tall and long-nosed, the other smaller and with a flat nose, and the last of very small stature and white as snow. After passing the evening talking with the host, the short-nosed man, before starting, asked for a piece of sole-leather, and the white one wanted a piece of walrus-tooth. The old man saw the departing visitors out, but when they left him, stood dumfoundered at seeing them bounding off in the shape of a reindeer, a fox, and a hare. It is said that the hare had need of something for a new tooth.

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