Original Title | Dialect | Informant | Genre Form | Genre Content | ID | glossed | Audio |
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wujænʲsʲəx numtoːrəm eæ̯sʲeæ̯t poɒ̯l jaltoɒ̯rətəm jærreæ̯t | pelym mansi (PM) | Jeblankov, Feodor Ljepifanovich | poetry/song (poe) | Bear Songs (bes) | 1338 | glossed | – |
Text Source | Editor | Collector |
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Kannisto, Artturi - Liimola, Matti (1958): Wogulische Volksdichtung gesammelt und übersetzt von Artturi Kannisto, bearbeitet und herausgegeben von Matti Liimola. IV. Band. Bärenlieder. In: Mémoires de la Société Finno-Ougrienne, 114. Helsinki: Suomalais-Ugrilainen Seura, 52-71. | Liimola, Matti | Kannisto & Liimola (KL) |
English Translation | German Translation | Russian Translation | Hungarian Translation |
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"The Song of the lowering of the bear by his grandfather, the Heavenly God" | – | – | – |
by Riese, Timothy |
Citation |
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Kannisto & Liimola 1958: OUDB Pelym Mansi Corpus. Text ID 1338. Ed. by Eichinger, Viktória. http://www.oudb.gwi.uni-muenchen.de/?cit=1338 (Accessed on 2024-11-14) |
wujænʲsʲəx numtoːrəm eæ̯sʲeæ̯t poɒ̯l jaltoɒ̯rətəm jærreæ̯t (glossed version) |
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1 |
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The Song of the Lowering of the Bear by his Grandfather, the Heavenly God |
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My grandfather, the heavenly god |
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[behind a seven-layered iron door] |
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placed me behind a seven-layered iron door. |
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I sat for a short time, I sat for a long time |
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I went to the door, I went to the back. |
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When I, an angry man, a furious man |
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[with a thirty-fingered hand of fingers] |
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[with a twenty-fingered hand of fingers] |
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hit the iron door then with a thirty-fingered hand of fingers, with a twenty-fingered hand of fingers, |
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the iron door of my grandfather, the heavenly god, flies to bits. |
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Then I run to the other end of the town |
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I run to the other end of the village. |
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Suddenly |
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my right front paw |
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sank down. |
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I look down: |
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a land buzzing like silk cloth is to be seen, |
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a land buzzing like a silky cloth is to be seen. |
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I think: If only my grandfather, the heavenly god, |
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[to the land buzzing like silk cloth] |
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[to the land buzzing like silky cloth] |
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would lower me down to the land buzzing like silk cloth, to the land buzzing like silky cloth. |
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Then I run back. |
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My grandfather, the heavenly god is walking about. |
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[my iron door, my stone door] |
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Who broke my iron door, my stone door? |
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[than me] |
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What sort of man has appeared stronger than me? |
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Grandfather, heavenly god, |
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I broke your iron door, your stone door |
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[I broke]. |
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Grandfather, heavenly god, |
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I ran to the other end of the town, |
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I ran to the other end of the village. |
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My right front paw |
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sank down. |
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I look down: |
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a land buzzing like silk cloth is to be seen, |
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a land buzzing like a silky cloth is to be seen. |
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Grandfather, heavenly god, |
42 |
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if you were only to lower me down! |
43 |
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My grandfather, the heavenly god, says: |
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Have you [in my dwelling land] |
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grown tired of living your days, |
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of living your life in my dwelling land? |
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If I were to lower you down, |
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you might not spare a single young girl |
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you might not spare a single young boy. |
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I retort: |
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What would attract me to a young girl, |
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what would attract me to a young boy? |
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I might lower you down, |
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(but if) horses go about, (if) cows go about, don't touch them! |
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Perhaps a human goes about, don't touch him! |
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Perhaps a woman goes about, don't touch her! |
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Live in accordance with what I have said! |
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(If) you do not live in accordance with the words I have said, |
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you will find no evening food, |
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you will find no morning food. |
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(If) you start living in accordance with the words I have said, |
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you will acquire a layer of fat thicker than a quarter cubit, |
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you will acquire a layer of fat thicker than a span. |
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My grandfather, the heavenly god, braids a rope. |
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He braids a long time, or he braids a short time, |
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he sits the night, he sits the day. |
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At some point his rope is ready. |
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My grandfather, the heavenly god says, |
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come! |
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I came. |
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I was tied to the end of the rope. |
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My grandfather, the heavenly god says, |
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I will say one more word to you: |
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Go about in the summer, |
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in winter lie in deep sleep in a den. |
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I am lowered down by my grandfather, the heavenly god. |
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I am lowered down for a short time |
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or I am lowered down for a long time. |
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At some point I look, |
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I'm being lowered down onto a hill in a forest so thick a mouse nose couldn't penetrate it |
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[I'm being lowered]. |
82 |
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Although I climb back like a squirrel, |
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although I climb back like a sable, |
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I am lowered down by my grandfather, the heavenly god. |
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Such an anger overcame me |
86 |
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such a fierceness overcame me. |
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When I listen to myself |
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my game-biting, doom-bringing heart |
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my elk-biting, doom-bringing heart |
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can be felt like the piercing of a fir-wood pole, |
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can be felt like the piercing of a larch-wood pole. |
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I cry out upwards: |
93 |
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Grandfather, heavenly god, put up with it! |
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[with you] |
95 |
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I won't spare you any girl running forwards, |
96 |
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I won't spare you any boy running forwards. |
97 |
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I won't spare you any horse running forwards, |
98 |
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I won't spare you any cow going forwards. |
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Then I went with my angry heart. |
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(If) I find a horse, I take it by the head, |
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(if) I find a cow, I take it by the head, |
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(if) I find a human, I take it by the head. |
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Suddenly |
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when I collect myself |
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my grandfather, the heavenly god |
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has enclosed me with an iron net, |
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I find no evening food, |
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I find no morning food. |
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Then I go about. |
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A pike is sitting in the water. |
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Pike, give me a presage! |
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Let loose a reliable god presage, |
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let loose a reliable spirit presage. |
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The pike started to soothsay. |
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I look: the waves of the water begin to surge, |
116 |
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the waves of the wind begin to surge. |
117 |
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Although I grasp at it |
118 |
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[from my thirty-fingered hand of fingers] |
119 |
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[from my twenty-fingered hand of fingers] |
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it sprang away from my thirty-fingered hand of fingers, from my twenty-fingered hand of fingers. |
121 |
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When springing away, the pike says: |
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Cunt boy! |
123 |
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You will waste away without food the rest of your life, |
124 |
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you did not live in accordance with the words spoken by your grandfather, the heavenly god. |
125 |
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I go off with my angry heart of an angry man. |
126 |
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I went about for a short time |
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or I went about for a long time, |
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suddenly a hare runs along. |
129 |
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With my snatching game-snatch mouth |
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with my snatching elk-snatch mouth I say: |
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Hare, sit down. |
132 |
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When the hare sat down, it said: |
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Thirty-fingered man of fingers, |
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twenty-fingered man of fingers, |
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what do you need? |
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I need nothing. |
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And why |
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did you have me sit down? |
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You, hare, soothsay! |
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Let loose a reliable god presage, |
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let loose a reliable spirit presage. |
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The hare sat down to soothsay. |
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Suddenly a rooted tree |
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moved with its roots, |
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a branchy tree moved with its branches. |
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When I strike at it |
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it sprang away from my thirty-fingered hand with fingers |
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[it sprang away], |
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it sprang away from my twenty-fingered hand with fingers |
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[it sprang away]. |
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The hare sprang away and said: |
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Cunt boy! |
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[spoken by your grandfather, the heavenly god] |
154 |
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You did not live in accordance with the words spoken by your grandfather, the heavenly god, |
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[your entire life] |
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You will waste away without food the rest of your life. |
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Cunt boy! |
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You frighten me. |
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(When) you are found by a navel-cut human, |
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you will be killed with a single axe, with a single knife, |
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your broth will be ash-water, cinder-water. |
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(If) I am pierced by a seven-pronged arrow with prongs, |
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I will run thirty meadows and river-stretches. |
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(If) I get killed, |
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my smell will spread over three huts. |
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I stood for a time, |
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I went on as an angry man, a furious man. |
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I went about for a short time, |
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or I went about for a long time, |
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when I listen to myself, |
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[spoken by my grandfather, the heavenly god] |
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I have not lived in accordance with the words spoken by my grandfather, the heavenly god. |
173 |
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I can feel my front paw becoming heavy, |
174 |
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I can feel my hind paw becoming heavy. |
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Again I go about for a short time |
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or I go about for a long time. |
177 |
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Suddenly I look: |
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a striped squirrel is running along. |
179 |
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Striped squirrel, striped squirrel, |
180 |
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let loose a reliable god presage, |
181 |
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let loose a reliable spirit presage. |
182 |
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My hind paw became heavy, |
183 |
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my front paw became heavy. |
184 |
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Striped squirrel, striped squirrel, |
185 |
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let loose a reliable god presage, |
186 |
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let loose a reliable spirit presage. |
187 |
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A rooted tree moved with its roots, |
188 |
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a branched tree moved with its branches. |
189 |
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When I grasp at it then, |
190 |
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it slipped out of my twenty-fingered hand of fingers, |
191 |
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it slipped out of my thirty-fingered hand of fingers. |
192 |
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Cunt boy! |
193 |
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You have started to waste away and dwindle away, |
194 |
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still you frighten me. |
195 |
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You have not lived in accordance with what your grandfather, the heavenly god said. |
196 |
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Prick up your two ears that pass by all fir trees, |
197 |
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your two ears that pass by all larch trees, |
198 |
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[prick up] and listen! |
199 |
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The words of your grandfather, the heavenly god, could be heard from up above, |
200 |
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I will tell it to you. |
201 |
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You go on, you'll come to a cone forest. |
202 |
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Your jay aunt, the old woman, will be eating a cone in the top of a pine. |
203 |
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You ask her, she throws down half a cone. |
204 |
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Then you say: |
205 |
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May your flesh be soot, be coal! |
206 |
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I went about for a short time or I went about for a long time. |
207 |
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Suddenly I look, |
208 |
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I really did come to a cone forest. |
209 |
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My jay aunt, the old woman, is really eating a cone. |
210 |
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Jay aunt, old woman, |
211 |
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my heart hungers. |
212 |
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[you] [me] |
213 |
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Throw me a cone longer than a quarter cubit, |
214 |
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throw me a cone, longer than a span. |
215 |
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She threw me down a piece of cone. |
216 |
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I bewitch her: |
217 |
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Eat your cones filling the forest the rest of your life. |
218 |
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May your flesh be coal! |
219 |
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May your flesh be soot! |
220 |
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I went for a short time or I went for a long time. |
221 |
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Suddenly I look: |
222 |
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A herd of cattle is going about. |
223 |
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I went through the cattle herd. |
224 |
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I went about for a short time, |
225 |
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or I went about for a long time, I look: |
226 |
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a woman is walking, a man is walking. |
227 |
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I went by the woman, |
228 |
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I went by the man. |
229 |
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Going on, I came to a large marsh extending to (dry) land, |
230 |
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I came to a large marsh extending to the water. |
231 |
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I look, on the ground of the marsh a big reindeer bull with hairy antlers is lying. |
232 |
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I started to stalk it. |
233 |
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One of my bones made a snap. |
234 |
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One of my bones made a snap. |
235 |
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In some way or other I caught it. |
236 |
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[my thirty-fingered hand of fingers] |
237 |
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I can feel my thirty-fingered hand of fingers losing strength, |
238 |
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[my twenty-fingered hand of fingers] |
239 |
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I can feel my twenty-fingered hand of fingers losing strength. |
240 |
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I had thought, |
241 |
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[my grandfather, the heavenly god] |
242 |
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I am more famous then my grandfather, the heavenly god, |
243 |
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I am more renowned. |
244 |
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[my grandfather, the heavenly god] |
245 |
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Although I wanted to surpass my grandfather, the heavenly god, in strength, |
246 |
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my grandfather, the heavenly god, seems to be stronger, |
247 |
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seems to be more famous. |
248 |
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I am being dried to dry wood, |
249 |
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I am being dried to dry grass. |
250 |
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I truly was [by my grandfather, the heavenly god] |
251 |
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entrapped in an iron net by my grandfather, the heavenly god. |
252 |
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[a three-year old reindeer calf] |
253 |
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My strength did not suffice to break the neck of a three-year old reindeer calf. |
254 |
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With my old doom-bringing, game-biting heart |
255 |
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I sliced through its neck. |
256 |
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My front legs grew strong, |
257 |
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my hind legs grew strong. |
258 |
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Then I go about again, |
259 |
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I wander through all the land of fir trees, |
260 |
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I wander through all the land of larch trees. |
261 |
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Suddenly I came to a well-known river, |
262 |
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I came to a renowned river. |
263 |
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Suddenly, when I look, |
264 |
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a large elkbull with antlers like boards |
265 |
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is rolling in the water. |
266 |
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[my thirty-fingered hand of fingers] |
267 |
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When I grasp at it with my thirty-fingered hand of fingers, |
268 |
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[my twenty-fingered hand of fingers] |
269 |
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When I grasp at it with my twenty-fingered hand of fingers, |
270 |
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my thirty-fingered hand of fingers |
271 |
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had at some time become strong, |
272 |
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my twenty-fingered hand of fingers |
273 |
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had at some time become strong. |
274 |
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The well-known river has high banks, |
275 |
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the renowned river has high banks. |
276 |
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[at the head of the high banks of the well-known river] |
277 |
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I threw it at the head of the high banks of the well-known river, |
278 |
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[at the head of the hills of the renowned river] |
279 |
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I threw it at the head of the hills of the renowned river. |
280 |
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I put on a layer of fat with the width of a palm, |
281 |
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I put on a fat layer with the width of a palm. |
282 |
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Then I go about again, |
283 |
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I wander along the entire well-known river, |
284 |
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I wander along the entire renowned river. |
285 |
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While wandering along the entire well-known river, |
286 |
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while wandering along the entire renowned river |
287 |
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Suddenly I look, |
288 |
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at the turning of the headland of the well-known river, |
289 |
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at the turning of the headland of the renowned river |
290 |
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the big elkbull is sitting. |
291 |
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I snatched it with a thirty-fingered hand of fingers, |
292 |
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I snatched it with a twenty-fingered hand of fingers, |
293 |
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I dragged it to the shore. |
294 |
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When I listen, my grandfather, the heavenly god |
295 |
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[above a wandering cloud] |
296 |
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[above a running cloud] |
297 |
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can be heard crying out above a wandering cloud, above a running cloud. |
298 |
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I listen. |
299 |
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[one of my ears] |
300 |
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I prick up one of my ears in one direction, |
301 |
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[my other ear] |
302 |
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I prick up my other ear in the other direction. |
303 |
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My grandfather, the heavenly god, says to me: |
304 |
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[the man with intestines] |
305 |
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You took the intestined man by his head, |
306 |
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[the man-son with a cut navel] |
307 |
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you took the man-son with a cut navel by his head. |
308 |
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Now the daughter of the [n.n.] man similar to you |
309 |
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[the daughter] sits without food, |
310 |
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his son sits without food. |
311 |
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The people of his town, |
312 |
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the people of his village |
313 |
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give him no bite of food, |
314 |
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give him no drop to drink. |
315 |
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For the continuation of your story, |
316 |
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for the continuation of your song |
317 |
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sit on your large elkbull |
318 |
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[sit on]. |
319 |
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You will sit a short or a long time, |
320 |
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a boat with a stem will appear, |
321 |
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a boat with a stern will appear. |
322 |
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You will be struck with an eagle-winged feathered arrow. |
323 |
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Let them extinguish you, |
324 |
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let them kill you! |