A Study in Tinguian Folk-Lore by Fay-Cooper Cole
page 6 of 93 (06%)
page 6 of 93 (06%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
Nagbotobotan, where the rivers empty their waters into the hole at
the edge of the world. IX. Gawigawen [male]. A giant who owns the orange trees of Adasin. X. Giambolan [male]. A ten-headed giant. XI. Gaygayoma. A star maiden who marries Aponitolau. The daughter of Bagbagak [male], a big star,--and Sinag [female], the moon--. XII. Tabyayen. Son of Aponitolau and Gaygayoma. Half brother of Kanag. XIII. Kabkabaga-an. A powerful female spirit who falls in love with Aponitolau. XIV. Asibowan. The maiden of Gegenawan, who is related to the spirit Kaboniyan. The mistress of Aponitolau. In consequence of modern rationalism there is a tendency on the part of a considerable number of the Tinguian to consider these tales purely as stories and the characters as fictitious, but the mass of the people hold them to be true and speak of the actors as "the people who lived in the first times." For the present we shall take their point of view and shall try to reconstruct the life in "the first times" as it appears in the tales. The principal actors live in Kadalayapan and Kaodanan, [7] towns which our chief story teller--when trying to explain the desire of Kanag to go down and get fruit--assures us were somewhere in the air, above the earth (p. 141). [8] At other times these places are referred |
|