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Philippine Folk Tales - Mabel Cook Cole
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Philippine Folk Tales, by Mabel Cook Cole
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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Title: Philippine Folk Tales
Author: Mabel Cook Cole
Release Date: March 27, 2008 [EBook #12814]
Language: English
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PHILIPPINE FOLK TALES ***
Produced by This eBook is produced by Jeroen Hellingman
and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
http://www.pgdp.net/. Illustrations have been added from
a copy made available at The Internet Archive.
Philippine Folk Tales
Compiled and Annotated
by
Mabel Cook Cole
Illustrations from Photographs by
Fay-Cooper Cole
Chicago
A.C. McClurg & Co.
1916
Copyright
A. C. McClurg & Co.
1916
Published November, 1916
Copyrighted in Great Britain
W.F. Hall Minting Company, Chicago
Preface
From time to time since the American occupation of the Islands, Philippine folk-tales have appeared in scientific publications, but never, so far as the writer is aware, has there been an attempt to offer to the general public a comprehensive popular collection of this material. It is my earnest hope that this collection of tales will give those who are interested opportunity to learn something of the magic, superstitions, and weird customs of the Filipinos, and to feel the charm of their wonder-world as it is pictured by these dark-skinned inhabitants of our Island possessions.
In company with my husband, who was engaged in ethnological work for the Field Museum of Natural History, it was my good fortune to spend four years among the wild tribes of the Philippines, During this time we frequently heard these stories, either related by the people in their homes and around the camp fires or chanted by the pagan priests in communion with the spirits. The tales are now published in this little volume, with the addition of a few folk-legends that have appeared in the Journal of American Folk-Lore and in scientific publications, here retold with some additions made by native story-tellers.
I have endeavored to select typical tales from tribes widely separated and varying in culture from savagery to a rather high degree of development. The stories are therefore divided into five groups, as follows: Tinguian, Igorot, the Wild Tribes of Mindanao, Moro, and Christian,
The first two groups, Tinguian and Igorot, are from natives who inhabit the rugged mountain region of northwestern Luzon. From time immemorial they have been zealous head-hunters, and the stories teem with references to customs and superstitions connected with their savage practices. By far the largest number belong to the Tinguian group. In order to appreciate these tales to the fullest extent, we must understand the point of view of the Tinguian. To him they embody all the known traditions of the first times
—of the people who inhabited the earth before the present race appeared, of the ancient heroes and their powers and achievements. In them he finds an explanation of and reason for many of his present laws and customs.
A careful study of the whole body of Tinguian mythology points to the conclusion that the chief characters of these tales are not celestial beings but typical, generalized heroes of former ages, whose deeds have been magnified in the telling by many generations of their descendants. These people of the first times
practiced magic. They talked with jars, created human beings out of betel-nuts, raised the dead, and had the power of changing themselves into other forms. This, however, does not seem strange or impossible to the Tinguian of today, for even now they talk with jars, perform certain rites to bring sickness and death to their foes, and are warned by omens received through the medium of birds, thunder and lightning, or the condition of the liver of a slaughtered animal. They still converse freely with certain spirits who during religious ceremonies are believed to use the bodies of men or women as mediums for the purpose of advising and instructing the people.
Several of the characters appear in story after story. Sometimes they go under different names, but in the minds of the story-tellers their personality and relationships are definitely established. Thus Ini-init of the first tale becomes Kadayadawan in the second, Aponitolau in the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth, and Ligi in the seventh. Kanag, the son of Aponitolau and Aponibolinayen, in the fifth tale is called Dumalawi.
These heroes had most unusual relations with the heavenly bodies, all of which seem to have been regarded as animate beings. In the fourth tale Aponitolau marries Gaygayoma, the star maiden who is the daughter of the big star and the moon. In the first story the same character under the name of Ini-init seems to be a sun-god: we are told that he is the sun,
and again a round stone which rolls.
Thereupon we might conclude that he is a true solar being; yet in the other tales of this collection and in many more known to the Tinguian he reveals no celestial qualities. Even in the first story he abandons his place in the sky and goes to live on earth.
In the first eight stories we read of many customs of the first times
which differ radically from those of the present. But a careful analysis of all the known lore of this people points to the belief that many of these accounts depict a period when similar customs did exist among the people, or else were practiced by emigrants who generations ago became amalgamated with the Tinguian and whose strange customs finally became attributed to the people of the tales. The stories numbered nine to sixteen are of a somewhat different type, and in them the Tinguian finds an explanation of many things, such as, how the people learned to plant, and to cure diseases, where they secured the valuable jars and beads, and why the moon has spots on its face. All these stories are fully believed, the beads and jars are considered precious, and the places mentioned are definitely known. While the accounts seem to be of fairly recent origin they conflict neither with the fundamental ideas and traditions of the first times
nor with the beliefs of today.
Stories seventeen to twenty-three are regarded as fables and are told to amuse the children or to while away the midday hours when the people seek shaded spots to lounge or stop on the trail to rest. Most of them are known to the Christianized tribes throughout the Islands and show great similarity to the tales found in the islands to the south and, in some cases, in Europe. In many of them the chief incidents are identical with those found elsewhere, but the story-tellers, by introducing old customs and beliefs, have moulded and colored them until they reflect the common ideas of the Tinguian.
The third group includes stories from several wild tribes who dwell in the large island of Mindanao. Here are people who work in brass and steel, build good dwellings, and wear hemp clothing elaborately decorated with beads, shell disks, and embroidery, but who still practice many savage customs, including slavery and human sacrifice.
The fourth division gives two tales from the Moro (hardy Malayan warriors whose ancestors early became converts to the faith of Mohammed). Their teachers were the Arabian traders who, about 1400, succeeded in converting many of the Malay Islanders to the faith of the prophet.
The last group contains the stories of the Christianized natives—those who accepted the rule of Spain and with it the Catholic religion. Their tales, while full of local color, nevertheless show the influence of the European tutors. They furnish an excellent opportunity to contrast the literature of the savage head-hunters with that of the Moro and Christian tribes and to observe how various recent influences have modified the beliefs of people who not many centuries ago were doubtless of a uniform grade of culture. It is interesting, too, to note that European tales brought into the Islands by Mohammedan and Christian rulers and traders have been worked over until, at first glance, they now appear indigenous.
Owing to local coloring, these tales have various forms. Still we find many incidents which are held in common by all the tribes of the Archipelago and even by the people of Borneo, Java, Sumatra, and India. Some of these similarities and parallelisms are indicated in the foot-notes throughout the book.
Contents
Group I: Tinguian
Aponibolinayen and the Sun6
Aponibolinayen17
Gawigawen of Adasen25
The Story of Gaygayoma Who Lives up Above37
The Story of Dumalawi44
The Story of Kanag50
The Story of Tikgi56
The Story of Sayen60
The Sun and the Moon65
How the Tinguian Learned to Plant66
Magsawi68
The Tree with the Agate Beads71
The Striped Blanket73
The Alan and the Hunters74
The Man and the Alan77
Sogsogot79
The Mistaken Gifts82
The Boy Who Became a Stone84
The Turtle and the Lizard86
The Man with the Cocoanuts88
The Carabao and the Shell89
The Alligator’s Fruit90
Dogedog91
Group II: Igorot
The Creation99
The Flood Story102
Lumawig on Earth105
How the First Head Was Taken111
The Serpent Eagle113
The Tattooed Men115
Tilin, the Rice Bird117
Group III: The Wild Tribes of Mindanao
Bukidnon
How the Moon and Stars Came to Be124
The Flood Story125
Magbangal127
How Children Became Monkeys130
Bulanawan and Aguio131
Bagobo
Origin133
Lumabet135
Bilaan
The Story of the Creation139
In the Beginning141
Mandaya
The Children of the Limokon143
The Sun and the Moon145
Subanun
The Widow’s Son147
Group IV: Moro
Mythology of Mindanao157
The Story of Bantugan163
Group V: The Christianized Tribes
Ilocano
The Monkey and the Turtle176
The Poor Fisherman and His Wife179
The Presidente Who Had Horns181
The Story of a Monkey183
The White Squash185
Tagalog
The Creation Story187
The Story of Benito189
The Adventures of Juan196
Juan Gathers Guavas200
Visayan
The Sun and the Moon201
The First Monkey202
The Virtue of the Cocoanut204
Mansumandig206
Why Dogs Wag Their Tails210
The Hawk and the Hen212
The Spider and the Fly214
The Battle of the Crabs215
Pronunciation of Philippine Names217
Illustrations
page
A Tinguian gentleman frontispiece
Tinguian hunters26
Returning from the hunt26
Hunting with the blowgun27
Sugar cane press40
Vats for boiling sugar cane juice40
Grinding corn41
Making a harrow41
Elevated living rooms reached by ladders56
Cocoanut trees tower above the homes56
Section of a Tinguian village57
A settlement in the mountains57
The talking jars68
Playing the nose flute68
Tinguian potters at work69
Seeding and combing cotton69
Bamboo rafts90
Hauling bamboo90
Rice terraces in the mountains91
A rice field91
Type of Mandaya tree house124
Swinging bridge over Padada river125
A net maker160
Bringing water from the stream160
Bagobos, Davao, Mindanao161
A rice granary196
Methods of transportation197
A store in a Christianized village197
Tinguian
Introduction
The dim light of stars filtered through the leafy canopy above us, and the shadowy form of our guide once more appeared at my horse’s head. It was only for an instant, however, and then we were plunged again into the inky darkness of a tropical jungle.
We had planned to reach the distant Tinguian village in the late afternoon, but had failed to reckon with the deliberateness of native carriers. It was only by urging our horses that we were able to ford the broad Abra ere the last rays of the sun dropped behind the mountains. And then, in this land of no twilights, night had settled quickly over us.
We had made our way up the mountain-side, through the thick jungle, only to find that the trail, long imperceptible to us, had escaped even the keen eyes of our guide. For several hours we wandered about, lost in the darkness.
On and on we went, through narrow paths, steep in places, and made rough and dangerous by sharp rocks as well as by those long creepers of the jungle whose thorny fingers are ever ready to seize horse or rider. Occasionally we came out of the forest, only to cross rocky mountain streams; or perhaps it was the same stream that we crossed many times. Our horses, becoming weary and uncertain of foot, grew more and more reluctant to plunge into the dark, swiftly flowing water. And our patience was nearly exhausted when we at last caught sight of dim lights in the valley below. Half an hour later we rode into Manabo.
I shall never forget that first picture. It was a weird spectacle. Coming out of the darkness, we were almost convinced that we had entered a new world. Against the blackness of the night, grass-roofed houses stood outlined in the dim light of a bonfire; and squatting around that fire, unclad save for gay blankets wrapped about their shoulders, were brown-skinned men smoking long pipes, while women bedecked with bright beads were spinning cotton. As they worked in the flickering light, they stretched their distaffs at arm’s length into the air like witches waving their wands; and with that the elfland picture was complete.
In the stillness of the night a single voice could be heard reciting some tale in a singsong tone, which was interrupted only when peals of laughter burst forth from the listeners, or when a scrawny dog rose to bark at an imaginary noise until the shouts of the men quieted him and he returned to his bed in the warm ashes. Later we learned that these were the regular social gatherings of the Tinguian, and every night during the dry season one or more of these bonfires were to be seen in the village.
After we had attained to the footing of welcome guests in these circles, we found that a good story-teller was always present, and, while the men smoked, the women spun, and the dogs slept, he entertained us with tales of heroes who knew the magic of the betel-nut, or with stories of spirits and their power over the lives of men.
The following are some of the tales heard first around the camp fire of the distant mountain village.
Aponibolinayen and the Sun
Tinguian
One day Aponibolinayen and her sister-in-law went out to gather greens. They walked to the woods to the place where the siksiklat grew, for the tender leaves of this vine are very good to eat. Suddenly while searching about in the underbrush, Aponibolinayen cried out with joy, for she had found the vine, and she started to pick the leaves. Pull as hard as she would, however, the leaves did not come loose, and all at once the vine wound itself around her body and began carrying her upward.¹
Far up through the air she went until she reached the sky, and there the vine set her down under a tree. Aponibolinayen was so surprised to find herself in the sky that for some time she just sat and looked around, and then, hearing a rooster crow, she arose to see if she could find it. Not far from where she had sat was a beautiful spring surrounded by tall betel-nut trees whose tops were pure gold. Rare beads were the sands of the spring, and the place where the women set their jars when they came to dip water was a large golden plate. As Aponibolinayen stood admiring the beauties of this spring, she beheld a small house nearby, and she was filled with fear lest the owner should find her there. She looked about for some means of escape and finally climbed to the top of a betel-nut tree and hid.
Now the