Page:Myth, Ritual, and Religion (Volume 1).djvu/212

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the Gulf of California, is the southern boundary of the godhead of the coyote or prairie wolf. The realm of his influence as a kind of Prometheus, or even as a demiurge, extends very far northwards. In the myth related by Con Quien, the chief of the central Papagos,[1] the coyote acts the part of the fish in the Sanskrit legend of the flood, while Montezuma undertakes the rôle of Manu. This Montezuma was formed, like the Adams of so many races, out of potter's clay in the hands of the Great Spirit. In all this legend it seems plain enough that the name of Montezuma is imported from Mexico, and has been arbitrarily given to the hero of the Papagos. A Biblical influence is also very apparent. What is neither Biblical nor Mexican is the appearance of the coyote. According to Mr. Powers, whose manuscript notes Mr. Bancroft quotes (iii. 87), all the natives of California believe that their first ancestors were created directly from the earth of their present dwelling-places, and in very many cases these ancestors were coyotes.

The Pimas, a race who live near the Papagos on the eastern coast of the Gulf of California, say that the earth was made by a being named Earth-prophet. At first it appeared like a spider's web, reminding one of the West African legend that a great spider created the world. Man was made by the Earth-prophet out of clay kneaded with sweat. A mysterious eagle and a deluge play a great part in the later mythical adventures of war and the world, as known to the Pimas.[2]

  1. Davidson, Indian Affairs Report, 1865, p. 131; Bancroft, iii. 75.
  2. Communicated to Mr. Bancroft by Mr. Stout of the Pima Agency.