Boas and Hunt (1897): A Prototype Digital Edition

8.8 | Text Annotation

There is still another wolf dance, which is derived from traditions of the initiation of men by the wolves. The tradition underlying this dance is that of Mink and the wolves. The sons of the chief of the wolves were preparing to be initiated. Mink found and killed them and thus obtained their names and places. He came back wearing the wolf’s scalp as a head mask. Three times he danced around the fire, covering his face and his head with his blanket. Then the fourth time he uncovered it and thus showed that he had killed the wolves. All the animals tried to kill him, but were unable to do so. I shall give the full legend later on. Mink, whose quē⁠´qutsa name is K·ēx·, thus obtained the wolf’s name, Nūn, as a member of the seal society, and also the wolf’s ʟō´koala or supernatural power. This tradition belongs to the clan La´alaxsᴇnt’aiō, and K·ēx· and Nūn are the two names of the ʟō´koala dancer. When he appears as quē´qutsa, he wears the frontlet (x·isī´waē) representing the wolf, nūnqᴇmʟ or ʟō´koalaqᴇmʟ (fig. 140, p. 493). 

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