46 NATURAL HISTORY OF ARCTIC AMERICA. 



a seal-skill string, Avliich passes around the body and keeps the breasts 

 ui). nor milk supi)ly cannot fail wliile she wears this. 



Many of tlic ancootH by long i)ractice become quite competent jug- 

 glers, and often take advantage to show oil' their jMjwcrs to the edifica- 

 tion of their friends. A common trick wit ii a fidl-fledged ancoot is to 

 como suddenly into a hut with a harpoou toggled on his breast, and the 

 handle sticking in his bade, the wound bleeding profusely. Such demon- 

 strations make a lasting impression ujion the minds of those who wit- 

 ness it, and it becomes no less marvelous when they see that he survives, 

 without even a mark after the wound. 



A very interesting legend is one which they tell as to the origin of 

 man, as regards creation, and the beginning of all things. They say it 

 came so of itself. Of the creation of man they say : In the beginning 

 there grew up from the earth a man ; he got a wife from one of his 

 thumbs (!), and from this pair the race has originated. But the whites, 

 whom they call cablunct, or codlunaJc, they have sprung from dogs. An 

 Eskimo woman at one time gave birth to human beings and dogs. These 

 latter she put in an old boot, and threw them out into the sea, saying, 

 *' Go hence, and become white people." From this they say whites live 

 on the sea, and their ships are like the Inuits' boots, round at both 



