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The
Tattooed Men ONCE there were two young men, very good friends, who were unhappy because neither of them had been tattooed. [110] They felt that they were not as beautiful as their friends. One day they agreed to tattoo each other. One marked the breast and back of the other, his arms and legs, and even his face. And when he had finished, he took soot off the bottom of a cooking-pot and rubbed it into all the marks; and he was tattooed beautifully. The one who had done the work said to the other: "Now, my friend, you are very beautiful, and you must tattoo me." Then the tattooed one scraped a great pile of black soot off the cooking-pots, and before the other knew what he was about, he had rubbed it all over him from the top of his head to the bottom of his feet; and he was very black and greasy. The one who was covered with soot became very angry and cried: "Why do you treat me so when I tattooed you so carefully?" They began to fight, but suddenly the beautifully tattooed one became a great lizard which ran away and hid in the tall grass, while the sooty one became a crow and flew away over the village. [111] Cole,
Mabel Cook. Philippine Folk Tales. London:
Curtis Brown,
1916. Notes [109] First recorded by
Dr. A.E. Jenks. [110] Tattooing is a painful process,
but Igorot men, women, and children willingly submit to it for the sake
of beauty. The design is first drawn on the skin with an ink made of soot
and water: then the skin is pricked through the pattern and the soot is
rubbed into the wounds. Various designs appear on the face, arms, stomach,
and other parts of the body, but the most important of all markings is
that on the breast of an Igorot man. This designates him as the taker
of at least one human head, and he is thus shown to be worthy of the respect
of his tribe. [111] This story also accounts for the
origin of the crow and the lizard, both of which are common in the Igorot
country. |
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©Heidi
Anne Heiner, SurLaLune Fairy Tales |