There lived a hunter in the
North, who had a wife and one child. His lodge stood far off in the
forest, several days' journey from any other. He spent his days in
hunting, and his evenings in relating to his wife the incidents that
had befallen him. As game was very abundant, he found no difficulty
in killing as much as they wanted. Just in all his acts, he lived a
peaceful and happy life.
One evening during the winter season, it chanced that he remained
out longer than usual, and his wife began to fear that some accident
had befallen him. It was already dark. She listened attentively, and
at last heard the sound of approaching footsteps.
Not doubting that it was her husband, she went to the door and
beheld two strange females. She bade them enter, and invited them to
remain. She observed that they were total strangers in the country.
There was something so peculiar in their looks, air and manner, that
she was disturbed by their presence. They would not come near to the
fire. They sat in a remote part of the lodge, shy and taciturn, and
drew their garments about them in such a manner as nearly to hide
their faces. So far as she could judge, they were pale, hollow-eyed,
and long-visaged, very thin and emaciated.
There was but little light in the lodge, as the fire was low, and
its fitful flashes, by disclosing their white faces and then
dropping them in sudden darkness, served rather to increase than to
dispel her fears.
"Merciful Spirit!" cried a voice from the opposite part of the
lodge; "there are two corpses clothed with garments!"
The hunter's wife turned around, but seeing nobody save her little
child, staring across from under his blanket, she said to herself,
"The boy can not speak; the sounds were but the gusts of wind." She
trembled, and was ready to sink to the earth.
Her husband at this moment entered, and in some measure relieved her
alarm. He threw down the carcass of a large fat deer.
"Behold what a fine and fat animal!" cried the mysterious females;
and they immediately ran and pulled off pieces of the whitest fat,
which they greedily devoured.
The hunter and his wife looked on with astonishment, but remained
silent. They supposed that their guests might have been stricken
with famine.
The next day, however, the same unusual conduct was repeated. The
strange females again tore off the fat and devoured it with
eagerness. The third day, the hunter thought that he would
anticipate their wants by tying up a share of the hunt, and placing
it apart for their express use. They accepted it, but still appeared
dissatisfied, and went to the wife's portion and tore off more.
The hunter and his wife were surprised at such rude and
unaccountable conduct, but they remained silent, for they respected
their guests, and had observed that they had been attended with
marked good luck during the sojourn of these mysterious visitors in
their lodge.
In other respects, the deportment of the females was strictly
unexceptionable. They were modest, distant, and silent. They never
uttered a word during the day. At night they would occupy themselves
in procuring wood, which they carried to the lodge, and then,
restoring the implements exactly where they had found them, resume
their places without speaking. They were never known to stay out
until daylight. They never laughed or jested.
The winter was nearly passed away, when, one evening, the hunter was
abroad later than usual. The moment he came in and laid down his
day's hunt, as was his custom, before his wife, the two females
seized upon the deer and began to tear off the fat in so
unceremonious a way that her anger was excited. She constrained
herself, however, in a good degree, but she could not conceal her
feelings, though she said but little.
The strange guests observed the state of her mind, and they became
uneasy, and withdrew further still into the remote gloom of the
lodge. The good hunter saw the eclipse that was darkening the quiet
of his lodge, and carefully inquired of its cause; but his wife
denied having used any words of complaining or reproach.
They retired to their couches, and the hunter tried to compose
himself to sleep, but could not, for the sighs and sobs of the two
females were incessant. He arose on his couch and addressed them as
follows:
"Tell me," said he, "what is it that gives you pain of mind and
causes you to bemoan your presence here. Has my wife given you
offense, or trespassed upon the rights of hospitality?"
They replied in the negative. "We have been treated by you with
kindness and affection. It is not for any slight we have received
that we weep. Our mission is not to you only. We come from the other
land to test mankind, and to try the sincerity of the living. Often
we have heard the bereaved by death say that if the lost could be
restored, they would devote their lives to make them happy. We have
been moved by the bitter lamentations which have reached the place
of the departed, and have come to make proof of the sincerity of
those who have lost friends. We are your two dead sisters. Three
moons were allotted us by the Master of Life to make the trial. More
than half the time had been successfully passed, when the angry
feelings of your wife indicated the irksomeness you felt at our
presence, and has made us resolve on our departure."
They continued to talk to the hunter and his wife, gave them
instructions as to a future life, and pronounced a blessing upon
them.
"There is one point," they added, "of which we wish to speak. You
have thought our conduct very strange and rude in possessing
ourselves of the choicest parts of your hunt. That was the point of
trial selected to put you to. It is the wife's peculiar privilege.
You love your wife. For another to usurp what belongs to her, we
know to be the severest test of her goodness of heart, and
consequently of your temper and feelings. We knew your manners and
customs, but we came to prove you, not by complying with but by
violating them. Pardon us. We are the agents of him who sent us.
Peace to your dwelling. Farewell!"
When they ceased, total darkness filled the lodge. No object could
be seen. The inmates heard the lodge-door open and shut, but they
never saw more of the Two Spirits.
The hunter found the success which they had promised. He became
celebrated in the chase, and never wanted for any thing. He had many
children, all of whom grew up to manhood; and he who had lain in the
lodge, a little child, while the Jeebi dwelt there, led them in all
good deeds, and health, peace, and long life were the rewards of the
hunter's hospitality.