AUSTRALIAN LEGENDARY TALES
FOLK-LORE OF
THE NOONGAHBURRAHS
AS TOLD TO
THE PICCANINNIES
COLLECTED BY
MRS. K. LANGLOH PARKER
WITH
INTRODUCTION BY ANDREW LANG, M.A.
Oolah, the lizard, was out
getting yams on a Mirrieh flat. She had three of her children with her. Suddenly
she thought she heard someone moving behind the big Mirrieh bushes. She
listened. All of a sudden out jumped Wayambeh from behind a bush and seized
Oolah, telling her not to make a noise and he would not hurt her, but that he
meant to take her off to his camp to be his wife. He would take her three
children too and look after them. Resistance was useless, for Oolah had only
her yam stick, while Wayambeh had his spears and boondees. Wayambeh took the
woman and her children to his camp. His tribe when they saw him bring home a
woman of the Oolah tribe, asked him if her tribe had given her to him. He said,
"No, I have stolen her."
"Well," they said,
"her tribe will soon be after her; you must protect yourself; we shall not
fight for you. You had no right to steal her without telling us. We had a young
woman of our own tribe for you, yet you go and steal an Oolah and bring her to
the camp of the Wayambeh. On your own head be the consequences."
In a short time the Oolahs
were seen coming across the plain which faced the camp of the Wayambeh. And
they came not in friendship or to parley, for no women were with them, and they
carried no boughs of peace in their bands, but were painted as for war, and
were armed with fighting weapons.
When the Wayambeh saw the
approach of the Oolah, their chief said: "Now, Wayambeh, you had better go
out on to the plain and do your own fighting; we shall not help you."
Wayambeh chose the two biggest
boreens that he had; one he slung on him, covering the front of his body, and
one the back; then, seizing his weapons, he strode out to meet his enemies.
When he was well out on to the
plain, though still some distance from the Oolah, he called out, "Come
on."
The answer was a shower of
spears and boomerangs. As they came whizzing through the air Wayambeh drew his
arms inside the boreens, and ducked his head down between them, so escaped.
As the weapons fell harmless
to the ground, glancing off his boreen, out again he stretched his arms and
held up again his head, shouting, "Come on, try again, I'm ready."
The answer was another shower
of weapons, which he met in the same way. At last the Oolahs closed in round
him, forcing him to retreat towards the creek.
Shower after shower of weapons
they slung at him, and were getting at such close quarters that his only chance
was to dive into the creek. He turned towards the creek, tore the front boreen
off him, flung down his weapons and plunged in.
The Oolah waited, spears
poised in hand, ready to aim directly his head appeared above water, but they
waited in vain. Wayambeh, the black fellow, they never saw again, but in the
waterhole wherein he had dived they saw a strange creature, which bore on its
back a fixed structure like a boreen, and which, when they went to try and
catch it, drew in its head and limbs, so they said, "It is Wayambeh."
And this was the beginning of Wayambeh, or turtle, in the creeks.
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