The Story of Gitxan
When the people were living all together at a Haida village, they owned
a fishing pool where they would go to catch trout. One time, three young
men fished trout in the pool. After they had caught some fish, they
prepared to roast them. They built a fire at the edge of the water.
Once the fish were roasted and ready to eat, they took one and placed
it on a skunk cabbage leaf. No sooner had they begun their meal than
a frog leaped upon the leaf and started to eat it. They threw the rest
of the fish away. They placed the next fish on a leaf and were ready
to resume their meal when another frog jumped upon it. Again they threw
the fish away and took up the last that they had roasted. They were
about to partake of it when another frog spoiled it for them. Angry
at the frog, they threw it into the fire, as they had already done with
the others.
Then they boarded their canoe and started to paddle away from the pool.
After they had gone some distance, a voice called them, singing mournfully,
"you'll shall not go very far before the man in the bow of the
canoe drops dead." Shortly after, the voice resumed singing, "When
you have travelled a while after the man at the bow has died, the man
in the centre shall also die. When the last man, at the stern, reaches
home and has finished telling the people at the village about what has
happened, he shall die too."
Before they had proceeded very far, the first man actually died as
predicted. When they reached half-way to the village, the centre man
dropped dead. As soon as the last survivor had reached home, the people
came down to meet him. They asked him what had happened to his companions.
At first he refused to tell, knowing that he would no sooner finish
speaking that the same thing would befall him. The people pressed him
and he had to explain. Then he dropped dead.
During the next night, while the tribe was asleep, a huge fire ball,
much like lightning, struck at the houses and the village burst into
flames. The people were destroyed by the fire. Only a young girl, one
of the head princesses, was saved. Having just reached they age of young
womanhood, she was camping out secluded in an underground hut, surrounded
by copper shields. When her time to come out had arrived, she found
out that the village had burned and that every house had been razed
to the ground. An old woman came toward the village, crying. On her
head was a hat of the Haida type. On its top and all around its brim
were frogs. On her cane were human-like faces and the carving at the
top was a large frog. She intoned a dirge, the Frog dirge.
A canoe then approached the site of the former village. In it sat three
people. One of them was a Haida chief on a hunting trip. Finding out
that the village had disappeared, he stepped ashore to make sure of
what he had already observed from a distance. He found the young woman
in hiding within the underground hut. He brought her to the canoe and
took her to his home village. Later he married her and she had several
children.
One day, as her children were mingling with others of the same age,
they were taunted and they learned that this was not the village of
their mother. They were foreigners here. This disclosure of her secret
to her children made their mother unhappy. She called her family together
and here is what happened.
After the young woman (from the village destroyed by the fireball) had
married the Haida chief, the people captured an eagle and tamed it. Above
its talons they had put copper bracelets as ornaments. The eagle would
sail away for one or two days and then come back to its adopted home.
But one day it flew away and never returned. The children who had been
taunted, regretted the loss of their pet. Because of the taunt their mother
decided to go away with them. Before departing, they sang a hunting song:
Hawhihoho... and they paddled away while singing this dirge. Yaehalawiyaw...
While they were still singing their mournful song out on the waters,
they saw a thick fog dropping over them. Then they intoned another dirge
while weeping, for they were lost at sea. Before they had finished,
an eagle swooped down and alighted in their canoe. They recognized the
copper bands at its feet and knew that their pet had come back to guide
them, for it looked in one direction. After they had paddled a long
time, they beheld land ahead. The eagle then flew away. They became
aware that they had come to Gitamat, south of Skeena River. There they
landed and travelled on foot northwards to the Skeena.
That is why the Gillarhdzawks tribe of the Gitselas (Kitselas) Canyon
claim that the land about Gitamat (Kitamaat) is their individual property
and hunting ground. Their rights have been acknowledged by the Gitamat
(Kitamaat) tribe.