The Search for the Middle and the Hardening
of the World
Zuni Mythology (New Mexico)
As it was with the first men and creatures, so it was with the world. It was
young and unripe. Earthquakes shook the world and rent it. Demons and monsters
of the under-world fled forth. Creatures became fierce, beasts of prey, and
others turned timid, becoming their quarry. Wretchedness and hunger abounded
and black magic. Fear was everywhere among them, so the people, in dread of
their precious possessions, became wanderers, living on the seeds of grass,
eaters of dead and slain things. Yet, guided by the Beloved Twain, they sought
in the light and under the pathway of the Sun, the Middle of the world, over
which alone they could find the earth at rest(1).
When the tremblings grew still for a time, the people
paused at the First of Sitting Places. Yet they were still poor and defenseless
and unskilled, and the world still moist and unstable. Demons and monsters fled
from the earth in times of shaking, and threatened wanderers.
Then the Two took counsel of each other. The Elder said the earth must be made
more stable for men and the valleys where their children rested. If they sent
down their fire bolts of thunder, aimed to all the four regions, the earth
would heave up and down, fire would, belch over the world and burn it, floods
of hot water would sweep over it, smoke would blacken the daylight, but the
earth would at last be safer for men.
So the Beloved Twain let fly the thunderbolts.
The mountains shook and trembled, the plains cracked and crackled under the
floods and fires, and the hollow places, the only refuge of men and creatures,
grew black and awful. At last thick rain fell, putting out the fires. Then
water flooded the world, cutting deep trails through the mountains, and burying
or uncovering the bodies of things and beings. Where they huddled together and
were blasted thus, their blood gushed forth and flowed deeply, here in rivers,
there in floods, for gigantic were they. But the blood was charred and blistered
and blackened by the fires into the black rocks of the lower mesas(2).
There were vast plains of dust, ashes, and cinders, reddened like the mud of
the hearth place. Yet many places behind and between the mountain terraces were
unharmed by the fires, and even then green grew the trees and grasses and even
flowers bloomed. Then the earth became more stable, and drier, and its lone
places less fearsome since monsters of prey were changed to rock.
But ever and again the earth trembled and the people were troubled.
"Let us again seek the Middle," they said. So they traveled far
eastward to their second stopping place, the Place of Bare Mountains.
Again the world rumbled, and they traveled into a country to a place called
Where-tree-boles-stand-in-the-midst-of-waters. There they remained long,
saying, "This is the Middle." They built homes there. At times they
met people who had gone before, and thus they learned war. And many strange
things happened there, as told in speeches of the ancient talk.
Then when the earth groaned again, the Twain bade them go forth, and they
murmured. Many refused and perished miserably in their own homes, as do rats in
falling trees, or flies in forbidden food.
But the greater number went forward until they came to Steam-mist-in-the-midst-of-waters.
And they saw the smoke of men's hearth fires and many houses scattered over the
hills before them. When they came nearer, they challenged the people rudely,
demanding who they were and why there, for in their last standing-place they
had had touch of war.
"We are the People of the Seed," said the men of the hearth-fires,
"born elder brothers of ye, and led of the
gods."
"No," said our fathers, "we are led of the gods and we are the
Seed People . . . "
Long lived the people in the town on the sunrise slope of the mountains of Kahluelawan, until the earth began to groan warningly
again. Loath were they to leave the place of the Kaka and the lake of their
dead. But the rumbling grew louder and the Twain Beloved called, and all together
they journeyed eastward, seeking once more the Place of the Middle. But they
grumbled amongst themselves, so when they came to a place of great promise,
they said, "Let us stay here. Perhaps it may be the Place of the
Middle."
So they built houses there, larger and stronger than ever before, and more
perfect, for they were strong in numbers and wiser, though yet unperfected as
men. They called the place "The Place of Sacred Stealing."
Long they dwelt there, happily, but growing wiser and stronger, so that, with
their tails and dressed in the skins of animals, they saw they were rude and
ugly.
In chase or in war, they were at a disadvantage, for they met older nations of
men with whom they fought. No longer they feared the
gods and monsters, but only their own kind. So therefore the gods called a
council.
Changed shall ye be, oh our children, "cried the Twain." Ye shall
walk straight in the pathways, clothed in garments, and without tails, that ye may sit more straight in council, and without
webs to your feet, or talons on your hands."
So the people were arranged in procession like dancers. And the Twain with
their weapons and fires of lightning shored off the forelocks hanging down over
their faces, severed the talons, and slitted the
webbed fingers and toes. Sore was the wounding and loud cried the foolish, when
lastly the people were arranged in procession for the razing of their tails.
But those who stood at the end of the line, shrinking farther and farther, fled
in their terror, climbing trees and high places, with loud chatter. Wandering
far, sleeping ever in tree tops, in the far-away Summerland, they are sometimes
seen of far-walkers, long of tail and long handed, like wizened men-children.
But the people grew in strength, and became more perfect, and more than ever
went to war. They grew vain. They had reached the Place of the Middle. They
said, "Let us not wearily wander forth again even though the earth tremble
and the Twain bid us forth."
And even as they spoke, the mountain trembled and shook, though far-sounding.
But as the people changed, changed also were the Twain, small and misshapen,
hard-favored and unyielding of will, strong of spirit, evil and bad. They
taught the people to war, and led them far to the eastward.
At last the people neared, in the midst of the plains to the eastward, great
towns built in the heights. Great were the fields and possessions of this
people, for they knew how to command and carry the waters, bringing new soil. And this, too, without hail or rain. So our ancients, hungry
with long wandering for new food, were the more greedy
and often gave battle.
It was here that the Ancient Woman of the Elder People, who carried her heart
in her rattle and was deathless of wounds in the body, led the enemy, crying
out shrilly. So it fell out ill for our fathers. For, moreover, thunder raged
and confused their warriors, rain descended and blinded them, stretching their
bow strings of sinew and quenching the flight of their arrows as the flight of
bees is quenched by the sprinkling plume of the honey-hunter. But they devised
bow strings of yucca and the Two Little Ones sought counsel of the Sun-father
who revealed the life-secret of the Ancient Woman and the magic powers over the
under-fires of the dwellers of the mountains, so that our enemy in the mountain
town was overmastered. And because our people found in that great town some
hidden deep in the cellars, and pulled them out as rats are pulled from a
hollow cedar, and found them blackened by the fumes of their war magic, yet
wiser than the common people, they spared them and received them into their
next of kin of the Black Corn. . . .
But the tremblings and warnings still sounded, and
the people searched for the stable Middle.
Now they called a great council of men and the beasts, birds, and insects of
all kinds. After a long council it was said,
"Where is Water-skate? He has six legs, all very long. Perhaps he can feel
with them to the uttermost of the six regions, and point out the very
Middle."
So Water-skate was summoned. But lo! It was the Sun-father in his likeness
which appeared. And he lifted himself to the zenith and extended his finger-feet
to all the six regions, so that they touched the north, the great waters; the
west, and the south, and the east, the great waters; and to the northeast the
waters above. and to the southwest the waters below.
But to the north his finger foot grew cold, so he drew it in. Then gradually he
settled down upon the earth and said, "Where my heart rests, mark a spot,
and build a town of the Mid-most, for there shall be the Mid-most
Place of the Earth-mother."
And his heart rested over the middle of the plain and valley
of Zuni. And when he drew in his
finger-legs, lo! there were the trail-roads leading
out and in like stays of a spider's nest, into and from the mid-most place he
had covered.
Here because of their good fortune in finding the stable Middle, the priest
father called the town the Abiding-place-of-happy-fortune.
(1) The earth was flat and round, like a plate.
(2) Lava.