Years and years ago at the very
beginning of time, when the world had just been made, there was no
night. It was day all the time. No one had ever heard of sunrise or
sunset, starlight or moonbeams. There were no night birds, nor night
beasts, nor night flowers. There were no lengthening shadows, nor
soft night air, heavy with perfume.
In those days the daughter of the Great Sea Serpent, who dwelt in
the depths of the seas, married one of the sons of the great earth
race known as Man. She left her home among the shades of the deep
seas and came to dwell with her husband in the land of daylight. Her
eyes grew weary of the bright sunlight and her beauty faded. Her
husband watched her with sad eyes, but he did not know what to do to
help her.
"O, if night would only come," she moaned as she tossed about
wearily on her couch. "Here it is always day, but in my father's
kingdom there are many shadows. O, for a little of the darkness of
night!"
Her husband listened to her moanings. "What is night?" he asked her.
"Tell me about it and perhaps I can get a little of it for you."
"Night," said the daughter of the Great Sea Serpent, "is the name we
give to the heavy shadows which darken my father's kingdom in the
depths of the seas. I love the sunlight of your earth land, but I
grow very weary of it. If we could have only a little of the
darkness of my father's kingdom to rest our eyes part of the time."
Her husband at once called his three most faithful slaves. "I am
about to send you on a journey," he told them. "You are to go to the
kingdom of the Great Sea Serpent who dwells in the depths of the
seas and ask him to give you some of the darkness of night that his
daughter may not die here amid the sunlight of our earth land."
The three slaves set forth for the kingdom of the Great Sea Serpent.
After a long dangerous journey they arrived at his home in the
depths of the seas and asked him to give them some of the shadows of
night to carry back to the earth land. The Great Sea Serpent gave
them a big bag full at once. It was securely fastened and the Great
Sea Serpent warned them not to open it until they were once more in
the presence of his daughter, their mistress.
The three slaves started out, bearing the big bag full of night upon
their heads. Soon they heard strange sounds within the bag. It was
the sound of the voices of all the night beasts, all the night
birds, and all the night insects. If you have ever heard the night
chorus from the jungles on the banks of the rivers you will know how
it sounded. The three slaves had never heard sounds like those in
all their lives. They were terribly frightened.
"Let us drop the bag full of night right here where we are and run
away as fast as we can," said the first slave.
"We shall perish. We shall perish, anyway, whatever we do," cried
the second slave.
"Whether we perish or not I am going to open the bag and see what
makes all those terrible sounds," said the third slave.
Accordingly they laid the bag on the ground and opened it. Out
rushed all the night beasts and all the night birds and all the
night insects and out rushed the great black cloud of night. The
slaves were more frightened than ever at the darkness and escaped to
the jungle.
The daughter of the Great Sea Serpent was waiting anxiously for the
return of the slaves with the bag full of night. Ever since they had
started out on their journey she had looked for their return,
shading her eyes with her hand and gazing away off at the horizon,
hoping with all her heart that they would hasten to bring the night.
In that position she was standing under a royal palm tree, when the
three slaves opened the bag and let night escape. "Night comes.
Night comes at last," she cried, as she saw the clouds of night upon
the horizon. Then she closed her eyes and went to sleep there under
the royal palm tree.
When she awoke she felt greatly refreshed. She was once more the
happy princess who had left her father's kingdom in the depths of
the great seas to come to the earth land. She was now ready to see
the day again. She looked up at the bright star shining above the
royal palm tree and said, "O, bright beautiful star, henceforth you
shall be called the morning star and you shall herald the approach
of day. You shall reign queen of the sky at this hour."
Then she called all the birds about her and said to them, "O,
wonderful, sweet singing birds, henceforth I command you to sing
your sweetest songs at this hour to herald the approach of day." The
cock was standing by her side. "You," she said to him, "shall be
appointed the watchman of the night. Your voice shall mark the
watches of the night and shall warn the others that the madrugada
comes." To this very day in Brazil we call the early morning the
madrugada. The cock announces its approach to the waiting birds. The
birds sing their sweetest songs at that hour and the morning star
reigns in the sky as queen of the madrugada.
When it was daylight again the three slaves crept home through the
forests and jungles with their empty bag.
"O, faithless slaves," said their master, "why did you not obey the
voice of the Great Sea Serpent and open the bag only in the presence
of his daughter, your mistress? Because of your disobedience I shall
change you into monkeys. Henceforth you shall live in the trees.
Your lips shall always bear the mark of the sealing wax which sealed
the bag full of night."
To this very day one sees the mark upon the monkeys' lips, where
they bit off the wax which sealed the bag; and in Brazil night leaps
out quickly upon the earth just as it leapt quickly out of the bag
in those days at the beginning of time. And all the night beasts and
night birds and night insects give a sunset chorus in the jungles at
nightfall.