In a village, a virtuous girl mysteriously gives birth after dreaming of a handsome man. Her fast-growing child begins crying incessantly for its father. When the villagers summon both humans and mystical tree-dwellers to identify him, the child chooses an old, humble man named Kasa’l over high-caste figures. Acknowledged as the father, Kasa’l marries the girl, resolving the mystery and blending human and supernatural worlds.
Source:
Tlingit Myths and Texts
by John R. Swanton
[Smithsonian Institution]
Bureau of American Ethnology
Bulletin 39
Washington, 1909
► Themes of the story
Supernatural Beings: This theme is central as the story involves mysterious and otherworldly events, such as a girl dreaming of a handsome man and inexplicably giving birth. The supernatural is personified through the enigmatic figure Kasa’l, whose connection to both the human and spirit world makes him a pivotal character.
Transformation: The story explores transformation on multiple levels: the emotional growth of the girl as she navigates her unique experience, the profound change in her life when she becomes a mother, and the societal shift when Kasa’l is revealed as the father. It delves into the transformative power of dreams and the symbolic merging of human and mystical realms.
Love and Betrayal: This theme manifests in the emotional bond formed under unusual circumstances. The girl’s love for her child compels her to uncover the truth about its father. There’s an underlying sense of betrayal when reality doesn’t align with expectations, as Kasa’l’s true nature and the mysterious origins of the child come to light.
► From the same Region or People
Learn more about the Tlingit people
Myth recorded in English at Wrangell, Alaska, in January-April 1904
An old spruce tree stood at the end of a certain village. In this same village a high-caste girl dreamed for several nights in succession that she was married to a fine-looking man, and by and by she gave birth to a boy baby. As she was a very virtuous girl, people wondered how she had come by it.
The child grew very fast, and soon began to talk. One day it began calling for its father. It would not stop, although they tried to humor it in every way.
Then people wondered whom it was calling, so the boy’s grandfather invited all the men of that village and of the surrounding villages to come to his house to see if the child would be able to recognize its father.
► Continue reading…
When this proved fruitless he invited the people who inhabit trees to come in, and as soon as they entered and sat down, the child stopped crying and began crawling around the circle, looking at each person. Then the people said, “We will see where that fatherless child is going.”
At the very end of the line toward the door sat an old man, and the child crawled right past the high-caste tree people toward him. As it did so, the others nudged one another, saying, “Look at Kasa’l.” They said this because the girl had had nothing to do with the high-caste tree people, but with this poor old man. The child, however, crawled right up to him, climbed into his lap and said, “Papa.” At once the old man married the girl.
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