Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Reading Notes, Part A: Khasi Folktales, How the Dog Came to Live with Man

Stories that tell the origin of something are always pretty interesting to me, so naturally I was drawn to the Khasi Folktale about How the Dog Came to Live with Man, from K. U. Rafy's collection. This is something that a lot of cultures visit a lot, but I like this take on it. It implies that the dog is crafty, which is usually not the case in other stories.

Reading Notes
  • The most important fair of all has arrived, and according with degree, each animal must bring something of some sort of value that can be sold.
    • Man was an enemy of the animals, so he wasn't invited.
  • The dog, being ironically lazy, didn't want to make something himself like the others, but instead decided to wander the countryside all day looking for something he could pass off as his own.
  • At the end of the day, he chanced upon a house where a family was eating fermented Khasi beans.
    • Being nice, the wife invited the dog to eat with them, which he gladly did.
  • Afterwards, realizing he could take the Khasi beans to the fair, the dog bargained with the family and ended up leaving with a clay pot of beans strapped to his back.
  • On the way to the fair, he bragged so much about his jar that the other animals were all very curious to see what he had.
  • Unfortunately, when the dog finally uncovered the jar, a bad smell came out; all the other animals made fun of the dog, and eventually destroyed the pot and trampled the food into the ground.
  • The dog tried to get the governor of the fair, the tiger, to intervene, but was just told off.
  • The dog eventually lost his temper, cursed all the animals, and ran away, where Man consoled him and offered the dog a place in his home.
    • The curse worked, because the stench of the food clung to the other animals, and so the Dog was able to track them for Man when out hunting.
  • Later, when Man had tamed Pig, he noticed Pig and Dog being lazy and decided to put them to work, sowing furrows in the field.
    • The Pig did a lot of the work, while Dog lazied around and jumped all over the furrows the pig had made.
  • Eventually the pig got tired of this, and complained to Man, who was loath to believe that Dog would be so lazy.
    • When Man inspected the work that had been done, he found the tracks of Dog all over, while only a few tracks of Pig's
    • Man decided that Pig had lied, and to punish him, made him sleep in a small separate shack and eat slop while Dog got to stay in Man's house and eat a normal dinner.
Ktung rymbai, also called tungrymbai; it's made from fermented soybeans (Source: Treebo)

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