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.
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
owner of this house was Ini-init,2 the Sun, but he was never at home in the
daylight, for it was his duty to shine in the sky and give light to all the
world. At the close of the day when the Big Star took his place in the sky to
shine through the night, Ini-init returned to his house, but early the next
morning he was always off again.
From her
place in the top of the betel-nut tree, Aponibolinayen saw the Sun when he came
home at evening time, and again the next morning she saw him leave. When she
was sure that he was out of sight she climbed down and entered his dwelling,
for she was very hungry. She cooked rice, and into a pot of boiling water she
dropped a stick which immediately became fish,3 so that she had all she wished
to eat. When she was no longer hungry, she lay down on the bed to sleep.
Now late
in the afternoon Ini-init returned from his work and went to fish in the river
near his house, and he caught a big fish. While he sat on the bank cleaning his
catch, he happened to look up toward his house and was startled to see that it
appeared to be on fire. He hurried home, but when he reached the house he saw
that it was not burning at all, and he entered. On his bed he beheld what
looked like a flame of fire, but upon going closer he found that it was a
beautiful woman fast asleep.
Ini-init
stood for some time wondering what he should do, and then he decided to cook
some food and invite this lovely creature to eat with him. He put rice over the
fire to boil and cut into pieces the fish he had caught. The noise of this
awakened Aponibolinayen, and she slipped out of the house and back to the top
of the betel-nut tree. The Sun did not see her leave, and when the food was
prepared he called her, but the bed was empty and he had to eat alone. That
night Ini-init could not sleep well, for all the time he wondered who the
beautiful woman could be. The next morning, however, he rose as usual and set
forth to shine in the sky, for that was his work.
That day
Aponibolinayen stole again to the house of the Sun and cooked food, and when
she returned to the betel-nut tree she left rice and fish ready for the Sun
when he came home. Late in the afternoon Ini-init went into his home, and when
he found pots of hot rice and fish over the fire he was greatly troubled. After
he had eaten he walked a long time in the fresh air. “Perhaps it is done by the
lovely woman who [9]looks like a flame of fire,” he said. “If she comes again I
will try to catch her.”
The next
day the Sun shone in the sky as before, and when the afternoon grew late he
called to the Big Star to hurry to take his place, for he was impatient to
reach home. As he drew near the house he saw that it again looked as if it was
on fire. He crept quietly up the ladder, and when he had reached the top he
sprang in and shut the door behind him.
Aponibolinayen,
who was cooking rice over the fire, was surprised and angry that she had been
caught; but the Sun gave her betel-nut5 which was covered with gold, and they
chewed together and told each other their names. Then Aponibolinayen took up
the rice and fish, and as they ate they talked together and became acquainted.
After some
time Aponibolinayen and the Sun were married, and every morning the Sun went to
shine in the sky, and upon his return at night he found his supper ready for
him. He began to be troubled, however, to know where the food came from, for
though [10]he brought home a fine fish every night, Aponibolinayen always
refused to cook it.
One night
he watched her prepare their meal, and he saw that, instead of using the nice
fish he had brought, she only dropped a stick into the pot of boiling water.
“Why do
you try to cook a stick?” asked Ini-init in surprise.
“So that
we can have fish to eat,” answered his wife.
“If you
cook that stick for a month, it will not be soft,” said Ini-init. “Take this
fish that I caught in the net, for it will be good.”
But
Aponibolinayen only laughed at him, and when they were ready to eat she took
the cover off the pot and there was plenty of nice soft fish. The next night
and the next, Aponibolinayen cooked the stick, and Ini-init became greatly
troubled for he saw that though the stick always supplied them with fish, it
never grew smaller.
Finally he
asked Aponibolinayen again why it was that she cooked the stick instead of the
fish he brought, and she said:
“Do you
not know of the woman on earth who has magical power and can change things?”
“Yes,”
answered the Sun, “and now I know that you have great power.”
“Well,
then,” said his wife, “do not ask again why I cook the stick.”
And they
ate their supper of rice and the fish which the stick made.
One night
not long after this Aponibolinayen told her husband that she wanted to go with
him the next day when he made light in the sky.
“Oh, no,
you cannot,” said the Sun, “for it is very hot up there, and you cannot stand
the heat.”
“We will
take many blankets and pillows,” said the woman, “and when the heat becomes
very great, I will hide under them.”
Again and
again Ini-init begged her not to go, but as often she insisted on accompanying
him, and early in the morning they set out, carrying with them many blankets
and pillows.
First,
they went to the East, and as soon as they arrived the Sun began to shine, and
Aponibolinayen was with him. They traveled toward the West, but when morning
had passed into noontime and they had reached the middle of the sky
Aponibolinayen was so hot that she melted and became oil. Then Ini-init put her
into a bottle and wrapped her in the blankets and pillows and dropped her down
to earth.
Now one of
the women of Aponibolinayen’s town was at the spring dipping water when she
heard something fall near her. Turning to look, she beheld a bundle of
beautiful blankets and pillows which she began to unroll, and inside she found
the most beautiful woman she had ever seen. Frightened at her discovery, the
woman ran as fast as she could to the town, where she called the people
together and told them to come at once to the spring. They all hastened to the
spot and there they found Aponibolinayen for whom they had been searching
everywhere.
“Where
have you been?” asked her father; “we have searched all over the world and we
could not find you.’
“I have
come from Pindayan,” answered Aponibolinayen. “Enemies of our people kept me
there till I made my escape while they were asleep at night”
All were
filled with joy that the lost one had returned, and they decided that at the
next moon they would perform a ceremony for the spirits8 and invite all the
relatives who were mourning for Aponibolinayen.
So they
began to prepare for the ceremony, and while they were pounding rice,
Aponibolinayen asked her mother to prick her little finger where it itched, and
as she did so a beautiful baby boy popped out. The people were very much
surprised at this, and they noticed that every time he was bathed the baby grew
very fast so that, in a short time, he was able to walk. Then they were anxious
to know who was the husband of Aponibolinayen, but she would not tell them, and
they decided to invite everyone in the world to the ceremony that they might
not overlook him.
They sent
for the betel-nuts that were covered with gold,9 and when they had oiled them
they commanded them to go to all the towns and compel the people to come to the
ceremony.
“If anyone
refuses to come, grow on his knee,” said the people, and the betel-nuts
departed to do as they were bidden.
As the
guests began to arrive, the people watched carefully for one who might be the
husband of Aponibolinayen, but none appeared and they were greatly troubled.
Finally they went to the old woman, Alokotan, who was able to talk with the
spirits, and begged her to find what town had not been visited by the betel-nuts
which had been sent to invite the people. After she had consulted the spirits
the old woman said:
“You have
invited all the people except Ini-init who lives up above. Now you must send a
betel-nut to summon him. It may be that he is the husband of Aponibolinayen,
for the siksiklat vine carried her up when she went to gather greens.”
So a
betel-nut was called and bidden to summon Ini-init.
The
betel-nut went up to the Sun, who was in his house, and said:
“Good
morning, Sun. I have come to summon you to a ceremony which the father and
mother of Aponibolinayen [14]are making for the spirits. If you do not want to
go, I will grow on your head.”10
“Grow on
my head,” said the Sun. “I do not wish to go.”
So the
betel-nut jumped upon his head and grew until it became so tall that the Sun
was not able to carry it, and he was in great pain.
“Oh, grow
on my pig,” begged the Sun. So the betel-nut jumped upon the pig’s head and
grew, but it was so heavy that the pig could not carry it and squealed all the
time. At last the Sun saw that he would have to obey the summons, and he said
to the betel-nut:
“Get off
my pig and I will go.”
So
Ini-init came to the ceremony, and as soon as Aponibolinayen and the baby saw
him, they were very happy and ran to meet him. Then the people knew that this
was the husband of Aponibolinayen, and they waited eagerly for him to come up
to them. As he drew near, however, they saw that he did not walk, for he was
round; and then they perceived that he was not a man but a large stone. All her
relatives were very angry to find that Aponibolinayen had married a stone; and
they compelled her to take off her beads11 and her good clothes, for, they
said, she must now dress in old clothes and go again to live with the stone.
So
Aponibolinayen put on the rags that they brought her and at once set out with
the stone for his home. No sooner had they arrived there, however, than he
became a handsome man, and they were very happy.
“In one
moon,” said the Sun, “we will make a ceremony for the spirits, and I will pay
your father and mother the marriage price for you.”
This
pleased Aponibolinayen very much, and they used magic so that they had many
neighbors who came to pound rice for them and to build a large spirit house.
Then they
sent oiled betel-nuts to summon their relatives to the ceremony. The father of
Aponibolinayen did not want to go, but the betel-nut threatened to grow on his
knee if he did not. So he commanded all the people in the town to wash their
hair and their clothes, and when all was ready they set out.
When they
reached the town they were greatly surprised to find that the stone had become
a man, and they chewed the magic betel-nuts to see who he might be. It was
discovered that he was the son of a couple in Aponibolinayen’s own town, and
the people all rejoiced that this couple had found the son whom they had
thought lost. They named him Aponitolau, and his parents paid the marriage
price for his wife—the spirit house nine times full of valuable jars.
After that
all danced and made merry for one moon, and when the people departed for their
homes Ini-init and his wife went with them to live on the earth.
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