The Stories of El Dorado
The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Stories of El Dorado, by Frona Eunice Wait
PRINTED AND ENGRAVED BY SUNSET PRESS SAN FRANCISCO
BY FRONA EUNICE WAIT
Happiness is found only in El Dorado, which no one yet has been able to reach.
—Spanish Proverb
Copyrighted 1904, by Frona Eunice Wait San Francisco, California
This book is dedicated to dear little Jack Morgan Gillespie, with the most affectionate and sincere regards of his devoted friend,
FRONA EUNICE WAIT
It has only recently been recognized as a fact, says Prof. A. F. Bandelier, that on the whole American continent , the mode of life of the primitive inhabitants was formed on one sociological principle, and consequently the culture of these peoples has varied, locally, only in degree , not in kind . The religious principles were fundamentally the same among the Sioux and the Brazilians, and physical causes more than anything else have been at the bottom of the local differences. Such has been my own experience in studying the stories of El Dorado which form the subject of this book, and in presenting a man—a culture hero—who came by sea from the East, I am justified by a more complete set of records than is known to the superficial student. As this man's principles of life were the same, we are forced to the conclusion that all the heroes were one conception, handed down by oral tradition, but widely separated as to locality, by the lapse of time, by migrations and commercial relations of the different tribes.
As to where these myths originated, or how old they are, I have nothing to suggest, since in presenting these simple variants, it is no concern of mine. It is sufficient for my purpose to know that they exist. To me they lend a dignity to our country by investing it with a misty past, replete with a mythology as rich and sublime as that of any of the races of antiquity. Not only will the study of them inspire patriotism and make us better acquainted with the inner lives of the red men, but it will tend to create an interest in our sister republics which cannot fail to be of lasting practical benefit. We know much more of Europeans than we do of the peoples of this continent.
Frona Eunice Wait
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Preface
TABLE OF CONTENTS
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
The Happy Island
Zamna, the Eye of the Sun
Votan, the People's Heart
Lord of the Sacred Tunkel
The Stars' Ball
The National Book
Manco-Capac, the Powerful One
Bochica and the Zipa
Song of Hiawatha
Michabo, the Great White Hare
The Birth of Corn
The Wrathy Chieftain
The Plumed Serpent, Quetzalcoatl
Cholula, the Sacred City
Tulla, the Hiding Nook of the Snake
The Departure of the Golden Hearted
El Dorado, the Golden
"Bimini, the Fountain of Youth"
Montezuma and the Paba
The Child of the Sun
The Gilded Man
The White Sea of the Manoas
The Mountain of Gold
The Amazon Queens
The Seven Cities of Cibola
The Kingdom of Quivera
The Land of Gold
The New El Dorado
APPENDIX