Indian Legends of the Cuyamaca Mountains
Audio only

Indian Legends of the Cuyamaca Mountains

By Mary Elizabeth JohnsonNarrated by Joseph Tabler
Length41m

About this audiobook

A Dusty Tomes Audio BookIn Cooperation with Spoken Realms Indian Legends of the Cuyamaca Mountains by Mary Elizabeth Johnson. Published in 1914 by Mary Elizabeth Johnson. Narrated by Joseph Tabler. This book is in the public domain. It is read ‘as written.'Audio copyright 2024 Contents of the booklet: ForewordHilsh Ki’e—Pine TreeHuts-tah’ Ta-mil ‘tah—Hanging HeadAh-ha’ Wi Ah-ha’—Water Colder WaterAh Kwer-rup’—Disease CureHul-ya-oo’ Nimoo-lu ‘kah—Phantom BasketNa-wa-Ti ‘e—Big HouseIn-yar’en Ah-ha’—No Eyes in WaterSeen-u-how ‘How-wak’—Old Woman’s TwinsSeen-u-how ‘Hum-poo’—Old Woman’s WhipKwut ah Lu ‘e-ah—Song DanceAh Kwir’—Red Paint (part missing) From the Author’s Foreword:Indian lore of the Cuyamaca Mountains and surrounding region in San Diego County, California, abounds in myths and legends handed down from generation to generation by tribal song and squaw-tale. Yet so swiftly has the hand of civilization wiped out the old traditions and customs, that but few Indians remain who remember them, and fewer still are those willing to divulge them. Only when one comes into intimate contact with them is one accorded the privilege and honor of hearing the tales of their ancestors. And it is through the friendship of some of the old-type Indians, that the author has been allowed a glimpse of the inner shrine of their lives. Cuyamaca is evidently a Spanish corruption of the Indian words Ah-ha’ Kwe-ah-mac’ (Water Beyond), a name used by the Indians, first to designate a location high on the middle mountain, but afterward applied to the entire group. These mountains had distinctive names also. The one farthest north, they called E-yee’ (Nest), because they believed that a big nest or den was on one of its slopes in which the wild animals disappeared when hunted, thus safely evading pursuit. The middle one, Hal-kwo-kwilsh’ (Tough Strong), gained this title in the battle of the peaks when he proved very formidable. The one known as the Cuyamaca Peak, acquired the name of Poo-kwoo-sqwee’ (Crooked Neck), in the same battle. And before the battle still another peak, Hilsh Ki’e (Pine Tree), belonged to the group, so the Indians say, but now lives far away. Pronunciation:The Indians accent their words strongly and enunciate with their teeth very nearly closed, which gives their language a rhythmical cadence quite pleasing to the ear. Dusty Tomes Audio Books are public domain books retrieved from history. If today’s technology had been available when first printed, they would be audio books already. I am grateful for the opportunity to record them now. Read online at archive.org and Hathitrust.org. Narrator’s note: I read only as written. These old books were once solid sellers for bookmen of their time. I believe they can shed light on their times and ours. Loving obscure and remote literature, they are a distinct pleasure for me to read to you. These turn out to be distant and unknown only so long as they remain unread, or unheard. Aloha.

Audiobook details

GenreGeneral Fiction, Psychology
Length41 mins
Narrated byJoseph Tabler
FormatAudiobook
Publish dateApr 2, 2024
LanguageEnglish

You may also like

The Fairy Changeling and Other Poems
The Fairy Changeling and Other PoemsDora Sigerson Shorter1h 56m$2 · $0.00
Eight Harvard Poets
Eight Harvard PoetsJohn Dos Passos, Robert Hillyer, E. E. Cummings, S. Foster Damon, Stewart Mitchell, William A. Norris, Dudley Poore, Cuthbert Wright1h 19m$1 · $0.00
The Balladists
The BalladistsJohn Geddie3h 8m$2 · $0.00
Summer of Love
Summer of LoveJoyce Kilmer2h 6m$2 · $0.00
In Divers Tones
In Divers TonesCharles G. D. Sir Roberts1h 36m$2 · $0.00
Robert Louis Stevenson, an Elegy; and Other Poems
Robert Louis Stevenson, an Elegy; and Other PoemsRichard Le Gallienne48m$2 · $0.00
Songs of the West
Songs of the WestS. Baring-Gould6h 51m$2 · $0.00
Stories of Birds
Stories of BirdsLenore Elizabeth Mulets2h 57m$2 · $0.00
The Oxford Book of English Verse, 1250-1900
The Oxford Book of English Verse, 1250-1900Various Authors26h 2m$2 · $0.00
April twilights, and other poems
April twilights, and other poemsWilla Cather1h 43m$2 · $0.00
The Witch Maid, and Other Verses
The Witch Maid, and Other VersesDorothea Mackellar53m$2 · $0.00
Earth Keeper
Earth KeeperN. Scott Momaday52m$6 · $0.00
Beautiful Birds
Beautiful BirdsEdmund Selous$1 · $0.00
A Feast of Lanterns
A Feast of LanternsVarious1h 39m$2 · $0.00
Pictographs of the North American Indians
Pictographs of the North American IndiansGarrick Mallery11h 24m$1 · $0.00
The Wordhord
The WordhordHana Videen8h 24m$15 · $0.00
The Wind Among the Reeds
The Wind Among the ReedsW. B. Yeats2h 25m$2 · $0.00
Pictographs of the North American Indians
Pictographs of the North American IndiansGarrick Mallery$2 · $0.00
The Fairy Legends
The Fairy LegendsThomas Keightley22h 30m$2 · $0.00
The Garden of Cyrus
The Garden of CyrusThomas Browne3h 31m$2 · $0.00