LOK AND HER CHILDREN
CHARACTER
| Lok | Bear |
Lok was a widow with two children; she lived with her mother. The old woman took care of the roots. She put them in a hole and slept with her head near it. When her daughter brought roots home and poured them into the hole, the children wanted some of them to eat, but the old woman said: “First I must give roots to the fire, to the mountains, the trees, the house, and the springs.” (This is the custom.)
The daughter said: “My children are hungry; you must give them some of the roots.”
Lok said: “You don’t know about these things. If they get sick, you will blame me.”
The old woman took roots and talked to the mountains; she said: “You must give us wood that won’t burn us.” To the springs she said: “Old grandmother, you always have water under your care; give us plenty of good water.” To the house she said: “You know us, our house that we built.” She talked to each part of the house. (If people didn’t talk to the posts of the house they would fall. The woman who told this myth said she had known of such cases.) To the posts she said: “Hold up this house; be good to us.”
She packed away all the roots they dug, ten large basketfuls, then she and her daughter brought in wood enough to last till spring.