Tolowim Woman & Butterfly Man

A Tolowim woman went out to gather food. She took her child with her, and while she
worked, she stuck the point of the cradle-board in the ground and left the child alone.
A large butterfly flew past, and she started after it and chased it for a long time. She would
almost catch it, and then just miss.
She thought, "Perhaps I can't run fast enough because of
this heavy thing," and she threw away her deerskin robe. But still she never could quite
overtake the creature.
Finally she threw away her apron too and hurried on, chasing the
butterfly until night came. Then, her child forgotten, she lay down under a tree and went to
sleep.
When she awoke in the morning, she found a man lying beside her. He said, "You have
followed me this far; perhaps you would like to follow me always. If so, you must follow me through a lot
of my people."
Without thinking of her child at all, the woman rose and followed the butterfly man. By and by
they came to a large valley, whose southern side was full of butterflies.
When the two reached the edge of the valley, the man said, "No one has ever come through
this valley alive. But you'll be safe if you don't lose sight of me. Follow closely."
They traveled
for a long time. "Keep tight hold of me; don't let go," the butterfly man said again and again.
When they had come half way through the valley, other butterflies swarmed about them in
great numbers. They flew every way, all around the couple's heads and in their faces, for
they wanted to get the Tolowim woman for themselves.
She watched them for a long time, holding tightly to her new husband.
But at last, unable to
resist, she let go of him and reached out to seize one of the others. She missed that one and
she tried to grab now one, now the other, but always failed, and so she wandered in the
valley forever, dazed and lost.
She died there, and the butterfly man she had lost went on through the valley to his home.
And now when people speak of the olden times they say that this woman lost her lover, and
tried to get others but lost them, and went crazy and died.
(Maidu)
Acknowledgement:
Native STAND