Indian mythology: Goddess and Grizzly

a long time ago, the earth was desolate.

the angels are alone in the sky and feel very lonely.

he drilled the sky out of a big hole with a cane.

snowflakes and ice are then constantly sown in the caves until snowflakes and ice piles up into mountains, up to the sky.

then people called this mountain sasset.

then the angels came from the clouds to the top of mount suss, and went down the hill.

when he reached the middle of the hill, he thought, "a few trees should be planted on the mountain." so, wherever his fingers touch, trees and weeds grow, and the snow that flows beneath his feet melts into a running river.

the angels also broke his crutches and screeched them into wood, big and small, and spilled them in the mountains and rivers, turning them into beavers, otters and fish, and animals in the mountains.

he brought together the leaves that had fallen from the trees and breathed and turned them into fly birds and insects.

the biggest of the beasts is the grizzly bear.

they were covered in gray hair and sharp claws, not only walking with two feet, but also speaking.

the grizzly bear looked terrible, so the angels kept them in the jungle far from their feet.

at this time, the great god decided to move up to live with his family.

he created a great number of bonfires in the mountains and drilled a hole on the top of the mountain to get smoke and mars out of it.

whenever he adds wood to the fire, the earth shakes, and the hole comes forth with sparks and smoke.

for a year in the spring, the angels and his family were cruising around the bonfire, while the wind god sent a terrible storm to the ground, swaying the mountains east and west, and the smoke of the bonfire could not come out of the caves of the top of the mountain, lashing them in the caves and making them weep.

the angel said to his youngest daughter, “go to the hole and say to wind god, ask him to shave softly.

i'm afraid we're going to lose our house." little girls get a chance to hang out, of course.

and her father whispered, "at the hole, don't put your head out, watch out for the wind and throw you on the ground.

before talking to him, wave your hand and say hello." the little girl came to the cave at the top of the mountain and conveyed her father's request to windsor.

as she was about to turn around and return home, she suddenly remembered that his father had said that the sea could be seen from the roof of their home.

the little girl really wants to see the ocean.

so she came out of the hole, looked around and completely forgot her father's advice.

it was at that time that the wind god grabbed her long hair and dragged her out of the cave and threw her in the snow.

she fell in a low, low, suspense forest on the border between the forest and the snow.

at that point, the grizzly bear, who was feeding the cubs, passed by, found the little girl and took her home.

mother bear was very close to her, and the red-haired girl lived with the bears, played and grew up。

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